
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_San_Ciriaco
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Scorpion wrote:Wow imagine if that happened today.. the board would literally explode.
Ptarmigan wrote:I think Hurricane San Ciriaco was a Category 5 at one point.
cycloneye wrote:Ptarmigan wrote:I think Hurricane San Ciriaco was a Category 5 at one point.
The peak intensity was 150 mph just before it made landfall in Puerto Rico.You can read the history of this devastating hurricane in the link posted at the first post.
Category 5 wrote:A very overlooked Hurricane, it holds several major records and a storm like this today would be chaos.
Cyclenall wrote:Category 5 wrote:A very overlooked Hurricane, it holds several major records and a storm like this today would be chaos.
This comment could also apply to Hurricane Donna of 1960.
capepoint wrote:Even today San Ciriaco is remembered in North Carolina. It wrecked many ships on the coast, and caused the abandonment of several communities along the southern outer banks, as the people moved to the mainland. To be a cat 3, it caused devastation throughout eastern North Carolina. Not many storms cause entire communities to be forever abandoned anymore.
Donna is one of the local benchmarks now for severe hurricanes, along with Hazel. But the old timers still refer to what they were told about San Ciriaco.
Hugo? Imagine Isabel's track, shifted to the west.CrazyC83 wrote:I think it was probably a Cat 4 off the coast east of Florida after clearing the Bahamas as well. Basically, think of what would have happened if Hugo ran into a stubborn ridge over the Appalachians (followed by a trough into the Atlantic).