ATL: Tropical Depression Fay
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- sittingduck
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
On the shear in 72 hours issue - I am curious - if Fay is projected to be inland in 72 hours - how does this apply to the intensification possibility in the Gulf? Is the NHC saying - that if for some reason Fay stays in the Gulf longer than projected then the shear becomes an issue?
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- Noles2006
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Sabanic wrote:THE LARGE-SCALE MODELS FORECAST WESTERLY SHEAR TO IMPACT FAY STARTING IN ABOUT 72 HR...WHICH SHOULD STOP INTENSIFICATION REGARDLESS OF WHETHER IT IS OVER WATER OR NOT.
That's 72 hours down the road. MONDAY, not while she skims the gulf.
Sabanic... the odds are firmly stacked against Fay strengthening even past 50 mph again... there is not much 'fuel' in the extreme NE GOM... and the land interaction will not help matters, either...
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- Sabanic
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Re: Re:
Noles2006 wrote:Sabanic wrote:THE LARGE-SCALE MODELS FORECAST WESTERLY SHEAR TO IMPACT FAY STARTING IN ABOUT 72 HR...WHICH SHOULD STOP INTENSIFICATION REGARDLESS OF WHETHER IT IS OVER WATER OR NOT.
That's 72 hours down the road. MONDAY, not while she skims the gulf.
Sabanic... the odds are firmly stacked against Fay strengthening even past 50 mph again... there is not much 'fuel' in the extreme NE GOM... and the land interaction will not help matters, either...
I agree, but 45-50 with all that rain still ain't a walk in the park
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Re: Re:
Sabanic wrote:Noles2006 wrote:Sabanic wrote:THE LARGE-SCALE MODELS FORECAST WESTERLY SHEAR TO IMPACT FAY STARTING IN ABOUT 72 HR...WHICH SHOULD STOP INTENSIFICATION REGARDLESS OF WHETHER IT IS OVER WATER OR NOT.
That's 72 hours down the road. MONDAY, not while she skims the gulf.
Sabanic... the odds are firmly stacked against Fay strengthening even past 50 mph again... there is not much 'fuel' in the extreme NE GOM... and the land interaction will not help matters, either...
I agree, but 45-50 with all that rain still ain't a walk in the park
Compared to the storms the North GOM has seen the last 4 years, you'll barely notice a 45 mph wind. You'll have to pick up a couple limbs and rake your yard, but that'll be about it.
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- Sabanic
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
So I guess flooding and heavy rains will not be problem. Well guess I'll plan a day at the beach then. 

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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
I agree that there is not enough depth to super charge Fay in the NW gulf, but there is water about 82 degree there http://ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=SGOF1.
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- Noles2006
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Sabanic wrote:So I guess flooding and heavy rains will not be problem. Well guess I'll plan a day at the beach then.
Nobody is saying that.
That said, I AM going to the beach today.
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Sabanic wrote:So I guess flooding and heavy rains will not be problem. Well guess I'll plan a day at the beach then.
You're going to get a lot of rain. I grew up in Baldwin county and remember the 30+ inches we got from Danny and the nearly 15 we got from Opal, but neither shut down the county. There will be localized flooding in low areas, but nothing catastrophic. Just be careful while driving and you'll be good to go.
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- Sabanic
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Noles2006 wrote:Sabanic wrote:So I guess flooding and heavy rains will not be problem. Well guess I'll plan a day at the beach then.
Nobody is saying that.
That said, I AM going to the beach today.
Have a good day Bro. I'd be speck fishing if I wasn't here at the office
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Winds still sustained at 42 gusting to 55 at St. Augustine, which proves that this is a very broad windfield, though this was rather obvious already
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- Noles2006
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Sabanic wrote:Noles2006 wrote:Sabanic wrote:So I guess flooding and heavy rains will not be problem. Well guess I'll plan a day at the beach then.
Nobody is saying that.
That said, I AM going to the beach today.
Have a good day Bro. I'd be speck fishing if I wasn't here at the office
I am going to do some surf fishing on Sunday (if the rain is gone)... I've heard that immediately after a weak storm (as long as the water isn't too dark and there isn't too much sea weed around), that surf fishing is pretty good... I guess I'll find out.
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http://hadar.cira.colostate.edu/ramsdis ... _ls_0.html
The upper-low/trough is falling apart, and Fay's upper-levels do not appear to be disturbed in the least. This implies her not weakening to TD quite as fast as expected.
The upper-low/trough is falling apart, and Fay's upper-levels do not appear to be disturbed in the least. This implies her not weakening to TD quite as fast as expected.
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- HURAKAN
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Lake Okeechobee water level as of Aug 22, 2008
12.52 ft.
About 2 ft. below historical average for this time of year.
THANKS FAY!
Lake O is coming back to normal and its water level should normalize in the following days as most of the run-offs from northern and central Florida arrive at the lake.
12.52 ft.
About 2 ft. below historical average for this time of year.
THANKS FAY!
Lake O is coming back to normal and its water level should normalize in the following days as most of the run-offs from northern and central Florida arrive at the lake.
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- cmdebbie
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
Compared to the storms the North GOM has seen the last 4 years, you'll barely notice a 45 mph wind. You'll have to pick up a couple limbs and rake your yard, but that'll be about it.
Tell that to the 10,000 people in my county alone that are still without power. Also, to all of the people that are having to use boats to travel down their streets.
Tell that to the 10,000 people in my county alone that are still without power. Also, to all of the people that are having to use boats to travel down their streets.

Last edited by cmdebbie on Fri Aug 22, 2008 9:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
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>>Lacking a core, there is not much low-level convergence at the center. This will make it a long, slow process to redevelop if the center was out over the Gulf.
Agreed. However, the flip side - to me anyway - would be the chance to pick up copious amounts more of moisture which seems to be the main threat for points west of Fay and east of me. Latest QPF I have access to still shows the potential for up to 21" (which I'm going to say - UNPROFESSIONALLY - is probably a little on the high side if in fact Fay moves out beyond 96-120 hours rather than finding herself within weak steering conditions {looking less likely but still not entirely out of the question}).
Steve
Agreed. However, the flip side - to me anyway - would be the chance to pick up copious amounts more of moisture which seems to be the main threat for points west of Fay and east of me. Latest QPF I have access to still shows the potential for up to 21" (which I'm going to say - UNPROFESSIONALLY - is probably a little on the high side if in fact Fay moves out beyond 96-120 hours rather than finding herself within weak steering conditions {looking less likely but still not entirely out of the question}).
Steve
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
cmdebbie wrote:Compared to the storms the North GOM has seen the last 4 years, you'll barely notice a 45 mph wind. You'll have to pick up a couple limbs and rake your yard, but that'll be about it.
Tell that to the 10,000 people in my county alone that are still without power. Also, to all of the people that are having to use boats to travel down their streets.
No disrespect intended, but outside of the flooding threat, there will be little to worry about from Fay on the Northern GOM. Central Florida dealt with 60-65 mph winds and those are high enough to bring down some older/weaker trees, but we aren't going to see anything that high on the northern GOM.
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
TideJoe wrote:
No disrespect intended, but outside of the flooding threat, there will be little to worry about from Fay on the Northern GOM. Central Florida dealt with 60-65 mph winds and those are high enough to bring down some older/weaker trees, but we aren't going to see anything that high on the northern GOM.
The flood threat is everything. Flooding is what kills the majority of people in tropical cyclones.
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- HURAKAN
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Re: ATL: Tropical Storm Fay over northern Florida Penninsula
TideJoe wrote:cmdebbie wrote:Compared to the storms the North GOM has seen the last 4 years, you'll barely notice a 45 mph wind. You'll have to pick up a couple limbs and rake your yard, but that'll be about it.
Tell that to the 10,000 people in my county alone that are still without power. Also, to all of the people that are having to use boats to travel down their streets.
No disrespect intended, but outside of the flooding threat, there will be little to worry about from Fay on the Northern GOM. Central Florida dealt with 60-65 mph winds and those are high enough to bring down some older/weaker trees, but we aren't going to see anything that high on the northern GOM.
No disrespect intended but most people that die during a storm die of drowning and not wind-related.
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