Sure am happy I don't..........
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- dixiebreeze
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Sure am happy I don't..........
have to have crow for supper -- never liked the stuff. Going to be an interesting weekend for sure:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... IR4/20.jpg
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... IR4/20.jpg
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- dixiebreeze
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- frederic79
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If it regenerates, something to watch...
Read this:
A well organized cloud pattern moved out of the Sahara Desert and was first identified on satellite imagery north of the Cape Verde Islands on August 23, 1985. The unusually fast 30 knot westward motion, combined with the dry Saharan air mass surrounding the disturbance, apparently inhibited the formation of a tropical cyclone until the system approached Cuba the evening of August 27. The rapid motion was the result of a strong high pressure ridge building westward across the Atlantic north of the tropical disturbance.
Elena was named when the center crossed central Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico. It quickly strengthened into a hurricane on August 29. A marked decrease in Elena’s forward motion began the next day as steering currents collapsed with the approach of a frontal trough from the northwest. Elena turned and took an eastward course for the next 36 hours in response to a low pressure system moving rapidly across Pennsylvania into the Atlantic.
As high pressure began to build over the Eastern U.S. on September 1, Elena once again resumed a gradual acceleration toward the WNW with increasing strength. The center made landfall near Biloxi, MS with a pressure of 951 mb.
Prior to reaching the central Gulf Coast, the track of Elena, with the exception of the very rapid motion, was typical of the Cape Verde-type system in August. Thereafter, a 3-day encounter with the "Fall-type" frontal low pressure system almost brought the center back to the Florida west coast before it turned to a WNW course on September 1.
-NHC Archives, September 1985
-With the strong atypical cold front arriving in mid-summer, I thought this account was fascinating given the location of our blob, formerly TD2.
A well organized cloud pattern moved out of the Sahara Desert and was first identified on satellite imagery north of the Cape Verde Islands on August 23, 1985. The unusually fast 30 knot westward motion, combined with the dry Saharan air mass surrounding the disturbance, apparently inhibited the formation of a tropical cyclone until the system approached Cuba the evening of August 27. The rapid motion was the result of a strong high pressure ridge building westward across the Atlantic north of the tropical disturbance.
Elena was named when the center crossed central Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico. It quickly strengthened into a hurricane on August 29. A marked decrease in Elena’s forward motion began the next day as steering currents collapsed with the approach of a frontal trough from the northwest. Elena turned and took an eastward course for the next 36 hours in response to a low pressure system moving rapidly across Pennsylvania into the Atlantic.
As high pressure began to build over the Eastern U.S. on September 1, Elena once again resumed a gradual acceleration toward the WNW with increasing strength. The center made landfall near Biloxi, MS with a pressure of 951 mb.
Prior to reaching the central Gulf Coast, the track of Elena, with the exception of the very rapid motion, was typical of the Cape Verde-type system in August. Thereafter, a 3-day encounter with the "Fall-type" frontal low pressure system almost brought the center back to the Florida west coast before it turned to a WNW course on September 1.
-NHC Archives, September 1985
-With the strong atypical cold front arriving in mid-summer, I thought this account was fascinating given the location of our blob, formerly TD2.
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- dixiebreeze
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- BayouVenteux
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- Location: Ascension Parish, Louisiana (30.3 N 91.0 W)
Re: If it regenerates, something to watch...
frederic79 wrote:Elena was named when the center crossed central Cuba into the Gulf of Mexico. It quickly strengthened into a hurricane on August 29. A marked decrease in Elena’s forward motion began the next day as steering currents collapsed with the approach of a frontal trough from the northwest. Elena turned and took an eastward course for the next 36 hours in response to a low pressure system moving rapidly across Pennsylvania into the Atlantic.
As high pressure began to build over the Eastern U.S. on September 1, Elena once again resumed a gradual acceleration toward the WNW with increasing strength. The center made landfall near Biloxi, MS with a pressure of 951 mb.
UNNNGH! Not another Wandering Elena please!
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Andrew '92, Katrina '05, Gustav '08, Isaac '12, Ida '21...and countless other lesser landfalling storms whose names have been eclipsed by "The Big Ones".
- dixiebreeze
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HurricaneBill
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Re: If it regenerates, something to watch...
BayouVenteux wrote:UNNNGH! Not another Wandering Elena please!![]()
If Elena had a nickname, it probably would have been "pain in the butt".
Her theme song was probably "Wanderer" by Donna Summer.
Cause I'm a wanderer
I travel every place
Yes, I'm a wanderer
From here to outer space.....
Last edited by HurricaneBill on Thu Aug 05, 2004 1:23 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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GalvestonDuck
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Rainband
- dixiebreeze
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ColdFront77
dixiebreeze wrote::eek:I'd like to see a "fish" storm in the GOM, rainband -- that would be a first!
A southeast to east and then northeast moving system from the Gulf toward or over Cuba/south of Florida (that is if you consider it missing only the United States on it's way out) to the other side of Florida and out to sea. ..
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- Hurricanehink
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GalvestonDuck
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Rainband
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GalvestonDuck
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Rainband wrote:Most , if not all storms in the GOM make landfall. The situation Tom refers to is very Unlikely. The scernario Hurricanehink refers to is as wellGalvestonDuck wrote:I thought they were considered "fish" when they stay out over the water.
?
Ah...okay, I'm clear now. I thought you were saying that they weren't called fish. You're just saying that there are rarely ever fish storms in the GOM. Gotcha!
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Rainband
GalvestonDuck wrote:Rainband wrote:Most , if not all storms in the GOM make landfall. The situation Tom refers to is very Unlikely. The scernario Hurricanehink refers to is as wellGalvestonDuck wrote:I thought they were considered "fish" when they stay out over the water.
?
Ah...okay, I'm clear now. I thought you were saying that they weren't called fish. You're just saying that there are rarely ever fish storms in the GOM. Gotcha!
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ColdFront77
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