Entire Texas coast
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Forum rules
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.
Entire Texas coast
IMO everyone from brownsville to sabine pass should watch Emily. The ridge might not be strong enough to keep Emily that far south, once entering the gulf.
0 likes
- deltadog03
- Professional-Met

- Posts: 3580
- Joined: Tue Jul 05, 2005 6:16 pm
- Location: Macon, GA
Re: Entire Texas coast
raynpa wrote:IMO everyone from brownsville to sabine pass should watch Emily. The ridge might not be strong enough to keep Emily that far south, once entering the gulf.
agreed...EVERYONE need to pay close attention to this...
0 likes
- stormie_skies
- Category 5

- Posts: 3318
- Joined: Tue Aug 12, 2003 9:25 pm
- Location: League City, TX
Normandy wrote:Ehh....i wouldnt think Houston or Galveston would take a hit from Em....but agreed we should at least watch. Corpus and points south need to be on full alert.
Even if we didnt take a direct hit, because of the angle of the TX coast I am pretty sure we could have to deal with squalls and coastal flooding if Em takes a more northerly track.....
0 likes
- southerngale
- Retired Staff

- Posts: 27418
- Joined: Thu Oct 10, 2002 1:27 am
- Location: Southeast Texas (Beaumont area)
raynpa wrote:Ummmmm I think the distance between Freeport and where Cindy made landfall was a whole lot more than 100 miles...........
No you misunderstand me.
When landfalling on the Yucatan, Cindy's center collapsed and reformed 100 miles north.
That wont happen with Emily, as she is an intense hurricane and not a weak TS.
0 likes
Normandy wrote:raynpa wrote:Ummmmm I think the distance between Freeport and where Cindy made landfall was a whole lot more than 100 miles...........
No you misunderstand me.
When landfalling on the Yucatan, Cindy's center collapsed and reformed 100 miles north.
That wont happen with Emily, as she is an intense hurricane and not a weak TS.
please explain how the 100 mile center relocation threw the eventual landfall off by about 400 miles
0 likes
-
corpusbreeze
- Category 1

- Posts: 386
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 3:57 pm
Re: Entire Texas coast
Well it was admitted at 5pm that it is not as strong, thus a more northerly forecasted track. Hey I think the NHC does a good job on forecasted tracks these days, but I'm starting to get a little leary right now here in Corpus. I believe the NHC has a hard time with west moving Hurricane that approach the west GOM. I cant remember a good call ever. I have a bad feeling Emily will be a major blown forecast and all heck could break loose in a couple days here in South Texas.raynpa wrote:IMO everyone from brownsville to sabine pass should watch Emily. The ridge might not be strong enough to keep Emily that far south, once entering the gulf.
0 likes
raynpa wrote:Normandy wrote:raynpa wrote:Ummmmm I think the distance between Freeport and where Cindy made landfall was a whole lot more than 100 miles...........
No you misunderstand me.
When landfalling on the Yucatan, Cindy's center collapsed and reformed 100 miles north.
That wont happen with Emily, as she is an intense hurricane and not a weak TS.
please explain how the 100 mile center relocation threw the eventual landfall off by about 400 miles
Since the center was relocated north, it was easily pulled north it was forecasted to get pulled North into Tx/LA border originally...but the relocation forced the cone to be shifted right.
0 likes
Oddly enough I'm very near the TX/LA border and the refineries have all begun preparations and are on standby to shut down units. My son works for one of them and was called in for the past two days on his days off for the sole purpose of getting everything secured and wait. I even asked a day or so ago in chat if maybe they knew something that I didn't........kinda made me wonder if I'd missed something. If I were in Corpus I'd be VERY concerned but here along the NW Gulf Coast people are being very prudent to keep lawns picked up and mowed (in between all the rain) garbage to the road for pickup and basically keeping an eye on this wild woman called Emily. We don't rest until the last squall in onshore and a mild tropical storm instead of a hurricane.
0 likes
- Sean in New Orleans
- Category 5

- Posts: 1794
- Joined: Thu Aug 28, 2003 7:26 pm
- Location: New Orleans, LA 30.0N 90.0W
- Contact:
Sean in New Orleans wrote:Watch Emily, but, definitely don't sweat it...the likelihood of a Texas hit is as weak as it's ever been with this system. I don't think it's coming to Texas, at all, and for those in Texas, I couldn't be happier. Sorry it's going to Mexico, but, somebody has got to take the hit.
Thats a bold statement....well see.
0 likes
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 371 guests





