October 4th, 1995

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LJR
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October 4th, 1995

#1 Postby LJR » Thu Oct 04, 2007 1:56 am

Hurricane Opal 1995 - Path Of Hurricane Opal 1995



Opal was first detected as a tropical wave moving off the African coast on September 11. The waved moved westward through the Atlantic and Caribbean and merged with a broad low pressure area over the western Caribbean on September 23. The combined system then developed into a tropical depression near the east coast of the Yucatan Peninsula on September 27. The depression drifted slowly northward, becoming Tropical Storm Opal as it reached the north coast of Yucatan on the 30th. Opal then moved slowly westward into the Bay of Campeche, where it became a hurricane on October 2. A gradual north-northeastward turn started later on the 2nd, with acceleration on the 3rd and 4th. Opal continued to strengthen, and a period of rapid strengthening late of the 3rd and early on the 4th made it a Category 4 hurricane. Weakening followed, and Opal was a Category 3 hurricane when it made landfall near Pensacola Beach, Florida late on the 4th. It was the first major hurricane to strike the Florida panhandle since Eloise in 1975. Opal weakened rapidly after moving inland, becoming a tropical storm over southern Alabama and a tropical depression over southeastern Tennessee. The cyclone was declared extratropical on the best track as it moved northeastward over the Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes into southwestern Quebec. The strongest winds occurred well away from the center of the cyclone during the extratropical stage.



Hurlbert Field, Florida reported sustained winds of 84 mph with a peak gust of 144 mph, and gusts to 70 mph occurred as far inland as northwest Georgia. However, the main impact from Opal was from storm surge. A combination of storm surge and breaking waves inundated portions of the western Florida Panhandle coast to a depth of 10 to 20 ft. The surge was responsible for the bulk of the $3 billion in damage attributed to Opal in the United States.



Opal was responsible for 9 deaths in the United States, including 8 from falling trees and one from a tornado. Opal was responsible for 50 deaths in Mexico and Guatemala due to flooding caused by heavy rains.


http://www.hurricanedisasterslive.com/HURRICANE-OPAL-1995.html
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Re: October 4th, 1995

#2 Postby Brent » Thu Oct 04, 2007 2:30 am

I am about 4 hours from the coast in East Central Alabama and got nailed by this one. Remains the worst hurricane I have experienced. We were just east of the eye track(and yes it was still a hurricane when it got here due to it's fast motion), came through totally at night which made it so much worse.
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Re: October 4th, 1995

#3 Postby LJR » Thu Oct 04, 2007 3:39 am

Brent wrote:I am about 4 hours from the coast in East Central Alabama and got nailed by this one. Remains the worst hurricane I have experienced. We were just east of the eye track(and yes it was still a hurricane when it got here due to it's fast motion), came through totally at night which made it so much worse.

We left and went closer in (can you imagine?) We had wind and rain but nothing scarry. Ivan on the other hand was a different story! We live about 10 or 15 miles from the coast and we experienced some pretty hefty winds, heavy rain, There were many trees down and through roofs and they were so twisted that everyone said tornadoes had to have done that. It sure was nice to see the Red Cross Vehicles.
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Re: October 4th, 1995

#4 Postby Category 5 » Thu Oct 04, 2007 9:44 am

A terrible Hurricane for alot of people. Brought high winds WELL inland.

Luckily it weakened before landfall, or else who knows what would've happened.
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