Will504 wrote:What is the website address on the truck? I can make out something track.com ?
THanks
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/hurricanetrack-com
or
http://www.hurricanetrack.com/
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Will504 wrote:What is the website address on the truck? I can make out something track.com ?
THanks
Janie2006 wrote:I get the impression that people I know (off these boards) think everything is over and done. Maybe it's a case of short attention spans. In any case, it's not quite over. Lee is going to interact with the approaching trough and produce a lot of heavy rain as it stumbles north and northeast.
[off-topic] And I'm not enjoying the model output, although I'm not quite buying some of the solutions for next week and beyond. [/off-topic]
jabman98 wrote:hurricanebuoy wrote:Houston are nary a cloud in the sky, a bit windy, and 95. The desert formation continues.
I just drove to the downtown area from The Woodlands. There are a lot of white, puffy clouds in the sky, but it feels so much nicer than it has for the past several months. The temp is lower and it's dry with a ENE wind. Much more pleasant. Take what we can get, I guess.
STORM SURGE...ELEVATED WATER LEVELS OF AS MUCH AS 3 TO 5 FEET ABOVE
GROUND LEVEL WILL CONTINUE TO OCCUR OVER PORTIONS OF SOUTHEASTERN
LOUISIANA AND COASTAL PORTIONS OF WESTERN MISSISSIPPI...WITH
ELEVATED WATER LEVELS AS MUCH AS 1 TO 3 FEET ABOVE GROUND LEVEL
ELSEWHERE WITHIN THE TROPICAL STORM WARNING AREA. ELEVATED WATER
LEVELS WILL BE SLOW TO RECEDE DUE TO PERSISTENT ONSHORE WINDS.
Kory wrote:BigB0882 wrote:We were told to watch out for gusts possibly up to 65 mph today and tonight. I would like to know the highest gust reported in Baton Rouge. Probably 40 if we are lucky, lol
That was because the center was forecasted to move over Baton Rouge...now its to the NW of Baton Rouge. Expect wind gusts just over tropical storm force.
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.
Will504 wrote:Got to give the models credit, they foretasted Lee a week in advance when it was barely a wave moving through the Caribbean. Almost feel like these models are becoming our "oracles" the way we are relying on computers now to predict future events. It's one thing to have them predict where a storm might go, taking into account the current conditions and weather patterns, but now they are getting pretty good at predicting the formation of a system several days in advance before it's even a blip on the map. Oh how technology has advanced in the last 10-20 years. In another 20 years we might be able to predict exactly when,where, and how strong a storm will be a month before it even comes a wave. It's just wild to believe that the computers can be so good to predict the formation of something in the future when there is nothing there now.
3090 wrote:Will504 wrote:Got to give the models credit, they foretasted Lee a week in advance when it was barely a wave moving through the Caribbean. Almost feel like these models are becoming our "oracles" the way we are relying on computers now to predict future events. It's one thing to have them predict where a storm might go, taking into account the current conditions and weather patterns, but now they are getting pretty good at predicting the formation of a system several days in advance before it's even a blip on the map. Oh how technology has advanced in the last 10-20 years. In another 20 years we might be able to predict exactly when,where, and how strong a storm will be a month before it even comes a wave. It's just wild to believe that the computers can be so good to predict the formation of something in the future when there is nothing there now.
I couldn't agree more.
Saw our local news tonight. Some models are beginning to forecast another disturbance by the end of this week, brewing in the BOC. Could we be seeing the beginning of what is about to come, as can be seen now on the latest satellite imagery, moving south? I don't know, but it will be something to track and would be very telling of truly how accurate these models have become.
SUMMARY OF 1000 PM CDT...0300 UTC...INFORMATION
-----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...31.0N 91.4W
ABOUT 55 MI...90 KM WSW OF MCCOMB MISSISSIPPI
ABOUT 60 MI...95 KM ESE OF ALEXANDRIA LOUISIANA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...35 MPH...55 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT...ENE OR 60 DEGREES AT 7 MPH...11 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...990 MB...29.23 INCHES
NEXT ADVISORY
-------------
THIS IS THE LAST PUBLIC ADVISORY ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL HURRICANE
CENTER ON LEE. FUTURE INFORMATION ON LEE CAN BE FOUND IN PUBLIC
ADVISORIES ISSUED BY THE HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL PREDICTION CENTER...
UNDER AWIPS HEADER TCPAT3 AND WMO HEADER WTNT33 KWNH...BEGINNING AT
400 AM CDT.
stormy70 wrote:Just rain here and there but seems to be quiet for the moment. I wonder what later tonight and tomorrow is going to bring as the storm moves to the NE? Any ideas? I am thinking more rain.
Chacor wrote:To whoever changed this thread title to "Remnants"... Lee is still a tropical depression. To call it "remnants" when it still poses a significant flood threat may be downplaying this. As is usual with TDs over land that are a US flood threat and not expected to re-enter water, the HPC will take over warnings. The NHC's last advisory does not necessarily mean this is no longer a tropical cyclone.
cycloneye wrote:After the last advisory is written on a system we always put the word Remnants.
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