tropicalweatherwatcher wrote:I like the stretch of coast beteen Palm Beach and Jacksonville because if u continue the NHC plot that is where it takes the storm.
But again this could be Georgia's first Major Hurricane Strike in over a century.
Friend...I'm sitting here at 2:30 a.m. looking over model data wondering the exact same thing.....the latest UKMet now brings Isabel onshore between Savannah and Charleston on day 5....and the GFS continues to trend west...
I'm beginning to wonder if instead of wild GFS swings from South Florida (one even took Issy over Cuba) to offshore near Bermuda -- if the true answer isn't in the middle....the NE Florida and Georgia coast....and area untouched by a major hurricane for over a century -- yet monster hurricanes in 1851, 1854, 1881, 1893, and 1898 proved it could happen.
Maybe the GFS is onto something...the hurricane slows east of the Bahamas, turn NNW in response to the weakness/ trough...but then the monster high bridges the escape route....and Isabel turns back to the WNW or NW and makes landfall between Jacksonville Beach and Hilton Head Island.....sorta like Hugo or Hazel farther southwest -- or a repeat of the 1854, 1881 or 1898 hurricanes (slammed the Georgia coast while moving WNW).
It's a very scary thought because it's been so long since a major hurricane struck the Georgia coast, I doubt half the folks on the barrier islands would even evacuate---thinking it will somehow miss again. If that occurred, we'd see a catastrophe....because the Georgia coast is shallow offshore = a trememdous storm surge potential.....and the approaching Autumnal equinox on the 20th would make tides even higher.