Swarely said:
Wiki says that the highest point on the islands are the Blue Hills at 161'
Winds are a hell of a lot faster at higher elevation.
Swarely said:
Wiki says that the highest point on the islands are the Blue Hills at 161'
Cromagnum said:Swarely said:
Wiki says that the highest point on the islands are the Blue Hills at 161'
Winds are a hell of a lot faster at higher elevation.
I'm very familiar with that site and others nearby. What they doesn't tell you is that site is practically on the sand. It would be like a condo on the sea wall in Galveston (without the sea wall) taking a CAT 5 in the shorts. Hell, that might have been the site that had the boats from the marina come crashing through, I can't remember for certain.VaultingChemist said:
They have plenty of time to leave Fort Walton if Irma does not turn to the north.
For the possibility that Irma and Jose might hit the same areas:Quote:
Twenty-three people are known to have stayed in the Richelieu Manor Apartments in Pass Christian, Mississippi during hurricane Camille, eight of whom died.
The site of the Richelieu Apartments, the corner of Henderson Avenue and US 90 in Pass Christian later became a shopping center. Coincidentally, it was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.
I saw a report that all were fine, but the house was uninhabitable.Rockdoc said:
I wonder if mr Branson has come out of his wine cellar on Necker Island yet. He may look around and go back down and start drinking all that wine.
I live in Gainesville too, keeping my fingers crossed that it runs up the east coast. If it stays out there, I'm staying but if I see that thing drifting towards running up the center of the state, I'm getting out of here.BoneAg said:
Ok, so now that the path looks to be headed up the Atlantic side of FL, the wife and kids are headed to Tallahassee in a caravan with some family friends. That should be far enough so that municipal utilities are relatively unaffected by the storm. In the event Irma starts heading that way, the caravan will head up towards Kentucky.
I'm staying behind to ride out the storm on that same family's place right outside of Gainesville. This is primarily to help with any work that may be needed to keep their livestock contained post-hurricane. We're well-stocked with water and fuel, hopefully we won't be needing it.
bjork said:
r/TropicalWeather has good commentary on the GFS. It's apparently broken and overshoots intensity. So, grain-of-salt and that jazz.
Euro called Harvey best and continues to do so at this point with Irma.CharlieBrown17 said:I only remember seeing that GFS wasnt as accurate on this threadbjork said:
r/TropicalWeather has good commentary on the GFS. It's apparently broken and overshoots intensity. So, grain-of-salt and that jazz.
Not for those of us in coastal GA, SC and NC... That track is like a stay of execution. Now it's time to see if it's an outlier or if the others will follow. IIRC the UK Met was sort of near there in recent runs.CJS4715 said:
12z Euro seems to be a problem...
ftaggie09 said:
Are the models now showing a later shift to the East?
Trying to figure out if I should still fly to Destin tomorrow night. It still looks like the main part of Irma won't really hit the Destin area.