chris_fit wrote:caneman wrote:I concur. I've been thinking Cedar Key the whole time as well. If this east shift verifies as a trend, it'd be darn nice if they would put St. Pete and Clearwater under watches.
I know right, I'd like to know the reasoning.
Warning, OK, fine, maybe no warning.... but not even a watch???? These are the places getting the worst of it right now. Tropical Storm Conditions ARE occurring. right. now. (check the latest band on radar)
Well, it has become apparent to me in the past few hours that Hermine has done a better job in stacking itself which has allowed it to strengthen so far this evening. One other huge factor in which I have been watchjing closely is that the dry air over the Central GOM has yet to really get near the cyclone. One thing I thought other than shear from the trough was that dry air may get entrained into the sytem upon its approach to the peninsula. So far, that has been kept at bay to this juncture.
This may still happen as the the next 12-24 hours we should have an idea on how that aspoect shakes out, but for right now, Hermine is having the about the best conditions she will have prior to landfall.
I will say that if the more east movement continues for the next few hours, NHC I feel will extend the watches/warnings just a bit south, as with the projected track as well. just my thoughts.