SunnyThoughts wrote:http://www.kristv.com/category/292861/live-stream Great live stream out of corpus
Looks to be a boat,, sitting int he middle of a road
Moderator: S2k Moderators
SunnyThoughts wrote:http://www.kristv.com/category/292861/live-stream Great live stream out of corpus
Rail Dawg wrote:For the record this is my 12th chase.
But I do understand the moderation of posts.
I will report what I see.
ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE 941 MB
EYE DIAMETER 15 NM
MAX SUSTAINED WINDS 110 KT WITH GUSTS TO 135 KT.
64 KT....... 30NE 25SE 20SW 25NW.
50 KT....... 50NE 40SE 40SW 40NW.
34 KT.......120NE 90SE 80SW 100NW.
12 FT SEAS..210NE 180SE 90SW 60NW.
Raebie wrote:DodgeDemon2018 wrote:So I have been reading that the loop shown in the EURO and GFS have shifted more west causing the storm to go well north of the South East Texas area. So is this final or is it still coming as NOAA still has it headed towards Galveston? I guess nobody will really know until it gets closer as these things are changing so fast, but it seems to be a complete miss of Houston right?
I guess, if you consider several feet of rain to be a "complete miss".
I agree--I think they should stay where they are and wait for the next one. Riding out a hurricane in a strong building is fine, but in a car, it's foolhardy.RL3AO wrote:Rail Dawg wrote:For the record this is my 12th chase.
But I do understand the moderation of posts.
I will report what I see.
I'm glad you have some experience. I'm a little worried that you're talking about driving at night into a hurricane. You should have already been positioned there now. This will likely be a category 4 at landfall. Driving towards the center is crazy. Doing it at night is downright insane.
3boover wrote:Lots of Tornado Warnings, the less talked about hazard with Harvey...
Rail Dawg wrote:For the record this is my 12th chase.
But I do understand the moderation of posts.
I will report what I see.
In fact, there has been a somewhat
notable change in the guidance, with very few of the models showing
Harvey lifting out toward the northeast by the end of the 5-day
forecast period. As a result, the NHC track forecast has been
pulled back a bit and keeps Harvey near or just inland of the Texas
coast through the middle of next week.
If you are already in your tornado shelter I don't see why you can't just put your phone on silent. It's not like you can take shelter when you're already in shelter. You're going to have to get some sleep sometime.galveston-d wrote:3boover wrote:Lots of Tornado Warnings, the less talked about hazard with Harvey...
I am in Galveston and very tempted to turn my phone off - every 15 minutes another tornado warning/watch! On the radar I spotted one curve that could have been a tornado less than a mile from me - that was a while back.I shouldn't be this way but I find the constant blare of alarms from my phone annoying. We are safe as we can be.
DodgeDemon2018 wrote: I understand the rain issue.
Harvey may continue to strengthen during the 6-12 hours it has
before landfall, but regardless it is expected to make landfall at
major hurricane strength.
SunnyThoughts wrote:http://www.kristv.com/category/292861/live-stream Great live stream out of corpus
RL3AO wrote:DodgeDemon2018 wrote: I understand the rain issue.
The rain is THE issue for the Houston area. We're talking about potentially the one of the worst flooding events in American history centered near Houston.
Callista wrote:It's enough to cause a lot of trouble, but even if Houston gets only a "complete miss" with a couple feet of rain and some flooding, I'll feel they've dodged a bullet.Raebie wrote:DodgeDemon2018 wrote:So I have been reading that the loop shown in the EURO and GFS have shifted more west causing the storm to go well north of the South East Texas area. So is this final or is it still coming as NOAA still has it headed towards Galveston? I guess nobody will really know until it gets closer as these things are changing so fast, but it seems to be a complete miss of Houston right?
I guess, if you consider several feet of rain to be a "complete miss".
Red Cross has set up shelters and is preparing to respond, of course, as usual.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests