wxman57 wrote:To help with the decision whether to shutter and/or evacuate. The SLOSH graphic below represents a "what if?" for a landfall near Tampa of an average-sized hurricane that is borderline Cat 2/Cat 3. If you're in one of those very low-lying communities on the coast, then your home/business will be inundated by lots of water. Tampa hasn't seen this kind of surge since the 1940s or 1950s. It's only a POSSIBLE surge for now. Ian would have to track inland just west of Tampa. Blue flags indicate water depth (not subtracting land, though all flags touch the water, not land).
http://wxman57.com/images/SLOSHTPA.JPG
http://wxman57.com/images/SLOSHTPA.JPG
The SLOSH models are no joke. If there were a storm where this plot needed to be seriously considered, Ian is it. Don't wait until the last minute and stuck in a low spot while evacuating on the highway .