Forget the bleach & TP, I don't have nearly enough booze on hand.
at the time I wrote that it was true. The cone was consistently moving East. Carry on suburb dad of the year. Get your ten foot two year old oak tree trimmed up for the storm.Ocean Of Funk said:thank you for proving that being a dumbass on the internet is still a thing.AustinCountyAg said:
exactly.. all signs point to it moving east. not west
yeah man I hear ya, just messing with you. We all need the good drenching rain in SE Texas for sure.AustinCountyAg said:
Like I said earlier. My pastures need the rain. I hope it keeps on this track. I'd love a good five inches of rain.
Mr. AGSPRT04 said:
Again, WGAS. Did you take a wrong turn and think you were in the DFW thread?flyingaggie12 said:
Lol I was talking about the two straight 90* lines after it makes its way in land.
f it now I am worried Frankie made a video.OCEN99 said:
basically they don't know.Dan Shedd said:
https://spacecityweather.com/marco-laura-poised-to-threaten-the-gulf-of-mexico-next-week/
FPS_Dough said:basically they don't know.Dan Shedd said:
https://spacecityweather.com/marco-laura-poised-to-threaten-the-gulf-of-mexico-next-week/
Quote:
Because a stronger storm might have more impetus to barrel into building high pressure over the southeastern United States, whereas a weaker one would be more steerable to the west
Cromagnum said:FPS_Dough said:basically they don't know.Dan Shedd said:
https://spacecityweather.com/marco-laura-poised-to-threaten-the-gulf-of-mexico-next-week/Quote:
Because a stronger storm might have more impetus to barrel into building high pressure over the southeastern United States, whereas a weaker one would be more steerable to the west
That sounds backwards. Stronger storms tend to feel weaknesses around ridges of high pressure more than weak ones. Storms also usually go around high pressure, not towards. Who knows.
Ag_07 said:Cromagnum said:FPS_Dough said:basically they don't know.Dan Shedd said:
https://spacecityweather.com/marco-laura-poised-to-threaten-the-gulf-of-mexico-next-week/Quote:
Because a stronger storm might have more impetus to barrel into building high pressure over the southeastern United States, whereas a weaker one would be more steerable to the west
That sounds backwards. Stronger storms tend to feel weaknesses around ridges of high pressure more than weak ones. Storms also usually go around high pressure, not towards. Who knows.
Yeah...I'm gonna take the professionals word. Plus given your track record I'm tempted to just go with whatever is opposite of your prediction.