On the topic of hurricanes if you ever want an interesting read, Issac's Storm is a really good read about the 1900 hurricane that hit Galveston.
aggie4231 said:
I followed him when he was first getting into meteorology and tropical storms on the wunderground blogs. He was pretty intelligent for a high school kid. I know several years ago he started college(probably has his B.S. by now). I think he even started his sight when he started college.
I trust him and Dr Jeff Masters (started wunderground). Masters used take part in the Hurricane Hunter flights until I think the late 80's, when he went through a near death flight through a storm.
There is also a video on YouTube about this. Seems well done.....elnaco said:
On the topic of hurricanes if you ever want an interesting read, Issac's Storm is a really good read about the 1900 hurricane that hit Galveston.
We did the same thing, my wife and very pregnant sister evacuated to SA while brother in law and I stayed home in Victoria and boarded up. As Gilbert made landfall, we played golf and the wife was caught in flooding and terrible weather. I'm a "hurricane prepper" and am ready to ride out anything short of a strong 4-5, but will send the wife away with the dogs, if it's bad enough. We've been lucky, since Carla, the only real problem we've had is flooding from Beulah, Claudette in 04(?) was not much worth than some northers we get through here...Brush Country said:
When I was a kid we evacuated Gilbert to SA, corpus saw nothing, SA saw storms and tornados and was chaos.
Brush Country said:
I don't think south Texas will ever again see a storm earlier than July or later than August.
Be careful what you wish for. You may be saying Howdy to Bret next weekend.Brush Country said:
Your choice of emoticon is throwing me for a loop, but I agree. Statistically, I realize this year is no difference than any other, but I've been back on the coast for six hurricane seasons now and we've not so much as thought about having to get the boards out. It's high time for at least a scare.
Brush Country said:
Your choice of emoticon is throwing me for a loop, but I agree. Statistically, I realize this year is no difference than any other, but I've been back on the coast for six hurricane seasons now and we've not so much as thought about having to get the boards out. It's high time for at least a scare.
Most of the problem is because a defined center of circulation hasn't formed yet, the models are just guessing at where the origination will be and what future steering mechanisms it will encounter.Cromagnum said:
So the Mets are saying it could hit anywhere from Mexico to Florida. Thanks for the insightful analysis...
Perfect. We're headed to New Orleans and Biloxi for the first part of our honeymoon.carpe vinum said:
You shouldn't be outside on your honeymoon anyway.B-1 83 said:Perfect. We're headed to New Orleans and Biloxi for the first part of our honeymoon.carpe vinum said:
Depends on the storm more than anything for me. I'm far enough inland and high enough that I don't worry about the surge, generally speaking. However, the size of the storm and the winds will dictate whether I decide to hunker down or pack and head to a more hospitable location during the storm.Smithjg said:There is also a video on YouTube about this. Seems well done.....elnaco said:
On the topic of hurricanes if you ever want an interesting read, Issac's Storm is a really good read about the 1900 hurricane that hit Galveston.
Question for Texags, at what Cat 1-5 do you "board up" for a coming storm? I live in Victoria, 40 miles from the coast. My boards are cut and stored and I can be finished in less than two hours. The most time consuming part is carrying the plywood around to each window and door.
What size storm do you batten down the hatches?
Quote:
The new Potential Tropical Cyclone advisories will provide more detailed guidance on systems that are not yet at depression strength but that have a chance of intensifying and bringing tropical storm or hurricane conditions to land areas within 48 hours. In their announcement of this and other service changes for 2017, NHC said: "Under previous longstanding NWS policy, it has not been permitted to issue a hurricane or tropical storm watch or warning until after a tropical cyclone had formed. Advances in forecasting over the past decade or so, however, now allow the confident prediction of tropical cyclone impacts while these systems are still in the developmental stage. For these land-threatening 'potential tropical cyclones', NHC will now issue the full suite of text, graphical, and watch/warning products that previously has only been issued for ongoing tropical cyclones."