Poll which is the biggest dodged bullet
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Jim Cantore
Poll which is the biggest dodged bullet
On my recent polls I've seen very intresting opinions which I greatly enjoy reading I learn alot from them
But Hurricanes have also spared areas alot of devestation heres the poll
which was the biggest dodged bullet
if your pick isn't on the list you can still vote for yours
I got to go with Floyd in 1999 if it would have ran into Florida it would have probibly been 140mph at the weakest I think and would have given Andrew a run for it's money (literally)
I say all of these where dodged disasters but Glorias collapse takes a close second to me
But Hurricanes have also spared areas alot of devestation heres the poll
which was the biggest dodged bullet
if your pick isn't on the list you can still vote for yours
I got to go with Floyd in 1999 if it would have ran into Florida it would have probibly been 140mph at the weakest I think and would have given Andrew a run for it's money (literally)
I say all of these where dodged disasters but Glorias collapse takes a close second to me
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Jim Cantore
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Hurricane Floyd wrote:Wake up on the third it hit at 100 I'm like.. What in the world happened what a dud"
It hit as a 95 mph Cat 1 hurricane. Makes Ethel look possible.
I live on the west coast, right before I went to sleep the night before Lili made landfall, I saw the sat image from TWC, and it showed Lili's western side eroding BIGTIME and I mean BIGTIME (and TWC still hyping like it was the next Andrew). I had the strangest feeling it would go poof, and when I woke up the next morning, well, it was poof.
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Jim Cantore
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The immediate Tampa Bay area dodged the bullet with Ivan and Charley, both of which were at some point forecasted to slam us. We have been incredibly lucky, but since many times hurricanes take similar paths throughout history (based on atmospheric proclivities and constants), and since we have been hit hard in the past 40+ years ago, it would not surprise me at all if we were to get hit during the next few years with a big one. I do not wish for this of course, because I have no wish to see my home destroyed. I'd better reinforce a few parts of my home.
Last edited by Tampa Bay Hurricane on Mon Aug 08, 2005 9:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Jim Cantore
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DoctorHurricane2003
I had to go with Floyd missing Florida because, if you get technical, that was a dodge. Isidore, Ethel, Lili, Mitch, Opal, et al were storms that kind of "fizzled out" to some degree. I couldn't go with Andrew. I know it would have been so much worse if it had hit a little further north, but I have a friend who rode it out in Homestead. Her story is absolutely incredible. So, IMHO, that was not a dodged bullet, really.
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Stormtrack
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As far as the US is concerned, it would be hard to find another storm that was all blow and no show like Hurricane Allen in 1980. After causing extensive deaths and destruction in Haiti, Jamaica, and the Yucatan this massive Cat 5 was expected to curve and hit somewhere on the upper Texas Coast. It was about the size of the whole Gulf of Mexico. It really scared people in Texas and I've never seen as many people evacuate like they did with Allen. It never curved and slowed down then weakened to a Cat 3 before striking a sparsely populated area between Corpus Christi and Brownsville, Texas. There were only 2 deaths that were a direct result of the storm in Texas.
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