Southeast Florida: Reasons For A Major Hit Soon
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Southeast Florida: Reasons For A Major Hit Soon
I have a strong feeling that southeast Florida is awaiting a big storm. Why? Read on...
I have a feeling that southeastern Florida (Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties) will get hit by a major hurricane from the eastern side of the state. If you think about it, these three counties have not seen a major hurricane in quite a while. Frances and Jeanne made landfall in east-central (not southeast) Florida, and only Jeanne was considered a major hurricane at landfall. Wilma dosn't count because it made landfall in southwest Florida and was a Category Two when it went through southeastern Florida. This means that southeast Florida has not yet recently seen a major hurricane. I have a strong feeling that this empty streak is coming to an end because southeastern Florida has usually been hit at least once during active cycles, such as that in the 1940s. With these details, southeastern Florida has had only one major hit in fairly recent years: Andrew from 1992. The day is coming...
Who agrees? I also think it may well be this year.
I have a feeling that southeastern Florida (Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties) will get hit by a major hurricane from the eastern side of the state. If you think about it, these three counties have not seen a major hurricane in quite a while. Frances and Jeanne made landfall in east-central (not southeast) Florida, and only Jeanne was considered a major hurricane at landfall. Wilma dosn't count because it made landfall in southwest Florida and was a Category Two when it went through southeastern Florida. This means that southeast Florida has not yet recently seen a major hurricane. I have a strong feeling that this empty streak is coming to an end because southeastern Florida has usually been hit at least once during active cycles, such as that in the 1940s. With these details, southeastern Florida has had only one major hit in fairly recent years: Andrew from 1992. The day is coming...
Who agrees? I also think it may well be this year.
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- Extremeweatherguy
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I think that Houston is more due than SE Florida. Houston has not seen hurricane force winds since 1983..and even then...it was just hurricane force gusts. The scary thing though is that during the last active cycle they were hit over and over and some periods seemed like hurricane force winds were the summer-time norm. I mean look at the link below for the storms that affected Houston in the 40s! Crazy! But again we are 23 years overdue and are just barely getting lucky each season. I have a feeling it is Houston's year...
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1940s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 40s^^
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1990s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 90s (not a single hurricane!)^^

http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1940s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 40s^^
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1990s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 90s (not a single hurricane!)^^
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-
- Professional-Met
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- Location: School: Florida State University (Tallahassee, FL) Home: St. Petersburg, Florida
- Contact:
Extremeweatherguy wrote:I think that Houston is more due than SE Florida. Houston has not seen hurricane force winds since 1983..and even then...it was just hurricane force gusts. The scary thing though is that during the last active cycle they were hit over and over and some periods seemed like hurricane force winds were the summer-time norm. I mean look at the link below for the storms that affected Houston in the 40s! Crazy! But again we are 23 years overdue and are just barely getting lucky each season. I have a feeling it is Houston's year...![]()
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1940s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 40s^^
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1990s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 90s (not a single hurricane!)^^
...And how much growth has taken place in the last 23 years!!??

And how 'bout that - post #2000!!
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-
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 11430
- Age: 35
- Joined: Sat Dec 24, 2005 9:00 pm
- Location: School: Florida State University (Tallahassee, FL) Home: St. Petersburg, Florida
- Contact:
Extremeweatherguy wrote:I think that Houston is more due than SE Florida. Houston has not seen hurricane force winds since 1983..and even then...it was just hurricane force gusts. The scary thing though is that during the last active cycle they were hit over and over and some periods seemed like hurricane force winds were the summer-time norm. I mean look at the link below for the storms that affected Houston in the 40s! Crazy! But again we are 23 years overdue and are just barely getting lucky each season. I have a feeling it is Houston's year...![]()
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1940s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 40s^^
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/hurricanes/1990s_maps.htm
^^TX storms in the 90s (not a single hurricane!)^^
great info there, Extreme. Been a long time for Texas. Official landfalls that is.....I think the west coast of FL will see some event this year while the NGOM gets a break. East coast, FL and TX are my landfall predictions...
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- tornadochaser1986
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I think there are many areas that we could say are due but as Derek mentioned many Southeast Florida hurricanes approach from the south or from the Southwest.
Although there are exceptions I would think one coming up from the South underneath Cuba could be a bigger possibility this upcoming season than one coming in strait from the Southeast.
Although there are exceptions I would think one coming up from the South underneath Cuba could be a bigger possibility this upcoming season than one coming in strait from the Southeast.
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Derek Ortt wrote:Miami seldom is hit form the east though
most hits come from the SSE to the SW. A Wilma/Irene track is more common than the Andrew/Katrina
I dunno Derek, you might want to rethink that...nearly ALL the major Miami strikes in history have come from the east:
1888:

1891:

1903:

(more a Fort Lauderdale strike, but the idea is the same)
1926:

1929:

(this one passed south of Miami, but again, the track was primarily from the east...a few miles north in landfall and Miami would have received the brunt)
1941:

1945:

(this one could be argued as coming in more from the SE)
1947:

(yeah, I know..another one that is more a Fort Lauderdale strike, but again, the idea is the same)
1965:

(I include Betsy only because this storm, tho passing through the Keys, largely sparing Miami, had another trajectory coming in primarily from the east. Again, a landfall just a few miles north would have been a major hit on Miami)
1966:

(Inez is yet another one that COULD have provided a major impact to Miami had the landfall been just a few miles to the north)
1992:

(Andrew needs no introduction)
--Lou
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Most of those did not even hit Miami... they went north or south of the city
The 1947 hurricane was a Broward event
Inez was in the Keys
1903 looks to be PB
Now... look at th tracks from 1960 on
Cleo... SSE
Betsy: Keys and an exception
Inez: The same
David: SSE
Dennis (1981) south
Floyd (1987) SW
Fabian (1991) SW
Gordon: SSE
Irene: SSW
Michelle: SSW
Charley: South (did bring very high winds to miami briefly)
Dennis: south (similar impacts as Charley)
Katrina: East
Wilma: SW
I know I am missing quite a few TS's into Miami as well
The 1947 hurricane was a Broward event
Inez was in the Keys
1903 looks to be PB
Now... look at th tracks from 1960 on
Cleo... SSE
Betsy: Keys and an exception
Inez: The same
David: SSE
Dennis (1981) south
Floyd (1987) SW
Fabian (1991) SW
Gordon: SSE
Irene: SSW
Michelle: SSW
Charley: South (did bring very high winds to miami briefly)
Dennis: south (similar impacts as Charley)
Katrina: East
Wilma: SW
I know I am missing quite a few TS's into Miami as well
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Derek I think your missing the point of what recmod is saying, even if most of those didnt hit Miami itslef the images do sort of show that alot of the SE of Florida gets majors from the east/ESE/ENE sort of direction and that even if they don't directly hit the city, it doesn't mean one bolting in from the same direction as those above won't hit Miami head on.
As a guess I'd think there are more major hurricanes that hit *south-eastern* from the east through SSE then the other way round.
As a guess I'd think there are more major hurricanes that hit *south-eastern* from the east through SSE then the other way round.
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The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products
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