Horn1991 wrote:Gonna be a long couple of days of "F5's", satellite and wobble watching.
Sidenote: Blue Shed is a great band name.
Back to the action.
Or Drive Shaft...and yes..this could be some anxious days coming up
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Horn1991 wrote:Gonna be a long couple of days of "F5's", satellite and wobble watching.
Sidenote: Blue Shed is a great band name.
Back to the action.
ConvergenceZone wrote:As much as I didn't want this to hit land and affect people and animals, I'm so glad it didn't just go through the channel. Had it went through the channel I think we would be looking at a Cat 4 hurricane as opposed to a Cat 1 hurricane. Let's hope that it continues to struggle and maybe landfalls as a very minimal cat 1 cane worse case. The fact that the NHC hasn't make their usual statement about it being possibly much stronger than forecast just shows you how confident they are on it not getting much stronger.
IcyTundra wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:As much as I didn't want this to hit land and affect people and animals, I'm so glad it didn't just go through the channel. Had it went through the channel I think we would be looking at a Cat 4 hurricane as opposed to a Cat 1 hurricane. Let's hope that it continues to struggle and maybe landfalls as a very minimal cat 1 cane worse case. The fact that the NHC hasn't make their usual statement about it being possibly much stronger than forecast just shows you how confident they are on it not getting much stronger.
NHC did mention that there is still some uncertainty on the intensity and that the average intensity error is close to 1 category at 48 hours. The best idea is to be preparing for a cat 2 and hoping for the best.
mpic wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:As much as I didn't want this to hit land and affect people and animals, I'm so glad it didn't just go through the channel. Had it went through the channel I think we would be looking at a Cat 4 hurricane as opposed to a Cat 1 hurricane. Let's hope that it continues to struggle and maybe landfalls as a very minimal cat 1 cane worse case. The fact that the NHC hasn't make their usual statement about it being possibly much stronger than forecast just shows you how confident they are on it not getting much stronger.
Mirrored my thoughts! I'm just north of Houston in Montgomery County most people in my circle are expecting a little rain and not really preparing. I'm the opposite. Groceries and bottled water in May, run the freezer empty before June 1st and all I have to do now is tidy up the porch and a few odds/ends in the yard. I'm elderly so that has a lot to do with how much I can get done at the last minute.
IcyTundra wrote:ConvergenceZone wrote:As much as I didn't want this to hit land and affect people and animals, I'm so glad it didn't just go through the channel. Had it went through the channel I think we would be looking at a Cat 4 hurricane as opposed to a Cat 1 hurricane. Let's hope that it continues to struggle and maybe landfalls as a very minimal cat 1 cane worse case. The fact that the NHC hasn't make their usual statement about it being possibly much stronger than forecast just shows you how confident they are on it not getting much stronger.
NHC did mention that there is still some uncertainty on the intensity and that the average intensity error is close to 1 category at 48 hours. The best idea is to be preparing for a cat 2 and hoping for the best.
MGC wrote:That is pretty much what we do. I keep very few items in the freezer. My parents had just made a big grocery run a week before Betsy hit in 65. No power for 3 weeks so we ate a lot of steak the next few days after Betsy. We have enough canned food for 6 months on hand and keep a lot of water too. 3 months without running water after Katrina here.......MGC
al78 wrote:I must admit I don't get the suggestions that Beryl could reach cat 3 before its final landfall.
The core got shredded by wind shear in the western Caribbean sea and passage over the Yucatan and it takes time for a storm to rebuild the core. It has about two days before landfall i.e. not a great deal. Atmospheric conditions are far from ideal with wind shear stifling re-intensification and dry air to the south. Harvey was a different beast, it didn't develop into a tropical storm until after it has crossed the Yucatan so there wasn't a shredded core to rebuild, and Harvey formed in peak hurricane season not early July. This is not a Gilbert either, that hit the Yucatan as a cat 5 and was still a cat 2 when it came back over water, Beryl was a cat 2 and weakened to a tropical storm. I'm thinking of something like Isidore in 2002 which made landfall in the Yucatan, came back over the Gulf as a tropical storm and hardly intensified before coming ashore on the Gulf coast despite forecasts it would strengthen back to a hurricane. That was different again because I believe Isidore's inner core was destroyed from the land passage and it only started reforming hours before Gulf landfall, but in my mind it seems to be tropical cyclones frequently struggle to intensify much after a significant land crossing. Georges 2008 is another example of a landfall disrupted hurricane that struggled to reintensify much as it crossed the Gulf.
al78 wrote:I must admit I don't get the suggestions that Beryl could reach cat 3 before its final landfall.
The core got shredded by wind shear in the western Caribbean sea and passage over the Yucatan and it takes time for a storm to rebuild the core. It has about two days before landfall i.e. not a great deal. Atmospheric conditions are far from ideal with wind shear stifling re-intensification and dry air to the south. Harvey was a different beast, it didn't develop into a tropical storm until after it has crossed the Yucatan so there wasn't a shredded core to rebuild, and Harvey formed in peak hurricane season not early July. This is not a Gilbert either, that hit the Yucatan as a cat 5 and was still a cat 2 when it came back over water, Beryl was a cat 2 and weakened to a tropical storm. I'm thinking of something like Isidore in 2002 which made landfall in the Yucatan, came back over the Gulf as a tropical storm and hardly intensified before coming ashore on the Gulf coast despite forecasts it would strengthen back to a hurricane. That was different again because I believe Isidore's inner core was destroyed from the land passage and it only started reforming hours before Gulf landfall, but in my mind it seems to be tropical cyclones frequently struggle to intensify much after a significant land crossing. Georges 2008 is another example of a landfall disrupted hurricane that struggled to reintensify much as it crossed the Gulf.
Tailgater33 wrote:Visible imagery showing an eddy near 24.5N 92W spinning ccw
around center I think. Not a sign of a well organized system imho.
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