BLHutch wrote:During Claudette, we were assured for DAYS that the storm was going to hit Brownsville. The system was supposed to turn. Yet, it kept marching closer and closer to us, only to veer away from Houston/Galveston at close to the last minute. If people were unprepared for that, it was because the NHC dropped the ball big time. As did our local wx folks. The lesson to be learned from that is to be prepared no matter what the models say. They can be wrong.
And Texans do take hurricanes seriously. I don't know why you'd think otherwise. We have a history with hurricanes surpassed only by Florida. I have lived on the Texas gulf coast my entire life. I for one, take storms seriously.
Brady
Exactly! I remember the local mets swearing over and over that she HAD to turn, she HAD to turn .... people on the central/eastern coast weren't prepared & boarded up because NHC had said up until 3 + days before landfall that Claudette was going to Mexico, and they were still forecasting a hit south of Corpus the morning before she made landfall! She surprised everyone, including the mets. Its not exactly fair to judge concern and willingness to prep on a storm like her....we were just really, really lucky she didnt strengthen more than she did.
Oh, and what was the culprit with Claudette? A building ridge that stayed weak and took its time. And people wonder why so many central and eastern Texans are watching Em with an eagle eye on here....







