A late October storm.....The Great Hurricane Mitch!!!
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A late October storm.....The Great Hurricane Mitch!!!
The fourth strongest Hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic Basin(Western Caribbean) Oct 26th on.......180 mph winds and of course
tremendous loss of life in Central America due to the deluge of rain...
I guess you could say Cat 4/5's can form late into the season.......
Any other late major canes that any one can remember?
tremendous loss of life in Central America due to the deluge of rain...
I guess you could say Cat 4/5's can form late into the season.......
Any other late major canes that any one can remember?
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DoctorHurricane2003
Since 1979:
2001: Michelle, Category 4 140 MPH (Oct-Nov)
1999: Lenny, Category 4 150 MPH (November)
1998: Mitch, Category 5 180 MPH (October)
1996: Lili, Category 3 115 MPH (October)
1995: Opal, Category 4 150 MPH (Sept-Oct); Roxanne Category 3 115 MPH (October)
1988: Joan, Category 4 145 MPH (October)
1985: Kate, Category 3 120 MPH (November)
Edit: Oops...mistype on Michelle. Thanks for be alarming, Scorpion. lol
2001: Michelle, Category 4 140 MPH (Oct-Nov)
1999: Lenny, Category 4 150 MPH (November)
1998: Mitch, Category 5 180 MPH (October)
1996: Lili, Category 3 115 MPH (October)
1995: Opal, Category 4 150 MPH (Sept-Oct); Roxanne Category 3 115 MPH (October)
1988: Joan, Category 4 145 MPH (October)
1985: Kate, Category 3 120 MPH (November)
Edit: Oops...mistype on Michelle. Thanks for be alarming, Scorpion. lol
Last edited by DoctorHurricane2003 on Tue Sep 28, 2004 10:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Scorpion
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Stratosphere747
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SouthernWx
Yes....1955 was the last time we lost a reconnisance aircraft in an Atlantic hurricane. We've had some close calls since....Camille in 1969, Edith in 1971, and Hugo in 1989. We're fortunate it hasn't happened since.
As for severe late season hurricanes, in 2000 Keith also reached cat-4 in October....in 2001, Iris reached 125 kt in October (in addition to Michelle later that month). Last season Kate reached 110 kt in early October.
In past decades, there were many severe late season hurricanes....Hazel reached cat-4 and slammed the Carolinas in October 1954, an October 1944 hurricane peaked at 145 mph before plowing Havana...later crossed Florida as a large cat-3 hurricane. In early November of 1932, a monster hurricane crossed the Caribbean....there was a report of 915 mb and 150-200 mph winds from a ship in the SW Caribbean. This hurricane killed thousands in Cuba as a cat-4.
All throughout the period of record there are many examples of violent October hurricanes....including one in mid-October 1846 that was likely a cat-5 near Key West, Florida. This monster obliterated Havana, Cuba and roared northward. Central pressure readings of 915-917 were recorded both in Cuba and the Florida Keys....where a storm surge 15' high innundated Key West, killing hundreds. The hurricane later smashed into Florida near Cedar Key...still of cat-4 intensity. After crossing the state from Cedar Key to Jacksonville and causing severe damage, the still intense hurricane roared NE into North Carolina. Several new inlets were cut in barrier islands by the storm surge in eastern North Carolina, indicating a hurricane still of cat-3 intensity.
Considerable damage was reported all along the Atlantic Coast to New England after the hurricane moved inland and moved rapidly northward.
As for severe late season hurricanes, in 2000 Keith also reached cat-4 in October....in 2001, Iris reached 125 kt in October (in addition to Michelle later that month). Last season Kate reached 110 kt in early October.
In past decades, there were many severe late season hurricanes....Hazel reached cat-4 and slammed the Carolinas in October 1954, an October 1944 hurricane peaked at 145 mph before plowing Havana...later crossed Florida as a large cat-3 hurricane. In early November of 1932, a monster hurricane crossed the Caribbean....there was a report of 915 mb and 150-200 mph winds from a ship in the SW Caribbean. This hurricane killed thousands in Cuba as a cat-4.
All throughout the period of record there are many examples of violent October hurricanes....including one in mid-October 1846 that was likely a cat-5 near Key West, Florida. This monster obliterated Havana, Cuba and roared northward. Central pressure readings of 915-917 were recorded both in Cuba and the Florida Keys....where a storm surge 15' high innundated Key West, killing hundreds. The hurricane later smashed into Florida near Cedar Key...still of cat-4 intensity. After crossing the state from Cedar Key to Jacksonville and causing severe damage, the still intense hurricane roared NE into North Carolina. Several new inlets were cut in barrier islands by the storm surge in eastern North Carolina, indicating a hurricane still of cat-3 intensity.
Considerable damage was reported all along the Atlantic Coast to New England after the hurricane moved inland and moved rapidly northward.
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Stratosphere747
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inotherwords
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I've read tons of "storm stories" and shipwreck stories. The stories abouth Mitch were the most compelling I've ever read.
Me too. I just finished reading "The Ship and the Storm" about the loss of the Fantome, a four-masted Windjammer sailing vessel. The captain and crew, some thirty-odd people, were never found, and only bits of the top two levels of the ship were ever recovered.
I was particularly interested in this because I'd sailed on vacation on the Fantome for 10 days in 1984. The book also quotes one of the hurricane hunters I interviewed for a story I wrote. He flew into Mitch and it was interesting to find out how little was known at the time about Cat 5 hurricanes because they happened so infrequently.
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- Hurricane Cheese
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Let's not forget the crazy Lenny in 1999 which got to cat 4 status in almost late november.
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HurricaneBill
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