Crap. I can't wait! I've got to order pizza's and Chinese food! Do it now!
It means that if you are hunting anywhere south of Temple and east of San Antonio that you should probably be prepared to make other plans. Other parts of the state might be wetter than normal but should be fine.primomosquito said:
I don't mean to be insensitive....but what does this mean for dove season opening day? Disclaimer: I have family along the coast and realize the seriousness of the situation.
Thriller said:
Radar image from Kermit (NHC recon aircraft) inbound to get data on Harvey - still pretty far out from the storm. You can get updated radar images every 5 minutes here
School will be probably be cancelled as necessarybigfoot10s said:
My wife is worried about us being in West San Antonio. I told her we could go north to Granbury to her parents, but it would be tough getting home for school to start Monday.
ABATTBQ87 said:School will be probably be cancelled as necessarybigfoot10s said:
My wife is worried about us being in West San Antonio. I told her we could go north to Granbury to her parents, but it would be tough getting home for school to start Monday.
Thriller said:
Radar image from Kermit (NHC recon aircraft) inbound to get data on Harvey - still pretty far out from the storm. You can get updated radar images every 5 minutes here
bigfoot10s said:ABATTBQ87 said:School will be probably be cancelled as necessarybigfoot10s said:
My wife is worried about us being in West San Antonio. I told her we could go north to Granbury to her parents, but it would be tough getting home for school to start Monday.
That's what I told her too. Should we think about leaving for the weekend?
ftaggie09 said:
So North of Houston up I-45 still just a lot of rain?
I think he's referring to the comparisons to some of the most intense hurricanes of all time, e.g., Gilbert, 1900 Storm, etc., not to mention the 15,000 year flood, whatever that is.Sasappis said:Meaux92 said:
Some of y'all are going a little overboard.
It is truly hard to tell now a days.
The weather channel this morning was using all sorts of overly dramatic words and catastrophic predictions. I don't trust them one bit.
I do trust the NHC and they seem confident that the storm will come ashore and then stall out. That seems like a bad thing but it still seems like mostly a rain event for the bulk if the area.
While 15" of rain is a lot, if that is over a 48 to 72 hour period most of the area can handle that. We have had a modert summer so the grass is green but the bayous and rivers are not already elevated.
The April flood of 16 the gauge closest to my house shows 13+" in less than a 12 hour period. That is a tremendous amount of rain. Just no way to know or say if we will have rates near that amount.
Here's a fascinating but long read about Jeff Masters flying into Hurricane Hugo.Quote:
Still think it would be cool to ride on one of these recon flights
Guess this answers my question. That's insaneRebelE91 said:Here's a fascinating but long read about Jeff Masters flying into Hurricane Hugo.Quote:
Still think it would be cool to ride on one of these recon flights
https://www.wunderground.com/resources/education/hugo1.asp