dhweather wrote:You know from 2004 what hurricanes can do.
The Florida West Coast appears to be in line for a hurricane to landfall
later this week. Odds are, this will be a major hurricane.
In 2004, the NHC had warnings issued for Charley in Punta Gorda, with
landfall expected further north. People got mad at the NHC, they
said the NHC "blew it". Punta Gorda was under a hurricane warning,
so I do not believe the NHC blew it. You can not fault the NHC for
missing rapid intensification, which Charley did prior to landfall.
We simply do not know enough to predict these events.
My point is, a hurricane is not a point. Katrina leveled the
Mississippi Gulf Coast, Parts of Southeast Louisiana, and coastal Alabama
- over 100 miles of devastation.
Events from Katrina and Rita are going to force the NHC to establish
a new way to communicate storm surge threats. The SS scale isn't
good enough to predict surge. If this storm becomes a major hurricane,
it will develop a large storm surge. Even is it weakens back to a
cat 1/2 at landfall, it will still likely have the major storm surge.
Don't stick around to find out. If warnings are issued for your area,
get out. I'd much rather leave and come back to no damage, than
be there and have no way out.
With any luck, this system won't be a threat, however, it's looking more
like it will be. Prepare now, be ready to evacuate. As always, listen
to your local officials for information on evacuation. Nobody else is
qualified to do so.
NOW is the time to prepare.
If you live in the Florida Peninsula, particularly south of Tampa, you
really need to be making preperations. I doubt Wilma will be a Katrina,
but there is a strong chance that Wilma's maximum intensity will
be cat 3/4. That build up a big surge that does not come down quickly.
It's been almost two months here, and life is far from normal. There are
heartbreaking stories every night on the news of peoples personal losses.
Don't become one of them.
And please do not ask "should I evacuate". You have Emergency
Operations Officials in your area that are paid to tell you that. They study
your area in great detail and are responsible for helping to save lives.
Be prepared to leave by tomorrow night.
David