I live about 45 miles inland from you.I'm worried about all the very old huge oak trees that surround my house sustained tropical force winds not a good thing in that regard.This is the first one I'm really sweating in a long time. The further west it goes, the more my house is at risk. I'm only about 5-10 miles from the ocean in Central FL and walking distance from the Indian River. If this thing makes landfall in southern FL rather than staying offshore, I could be in some deep dog pooh. Winds and flooding are both major concerns. Mother f**ker, go east. EAST!
I've got large palms right in front of my house. If they fall, I have to pray it's towards the street. If they land on my house, it's game over. Also one in the backyard just outside the pool, if that falls on the screen room, it will cave it in.I live about 45 miles inland from you.I'm worried about all the very old huge oak trees that surround my house sustained tropical force winds not a good thing in that regard.
You guys seem to be right in the area where the storm will look like it's headed, but all the models are in agreement that it will turn north before it hits. Best of luck and I think it's smart to send the family away.Living north of WPB and now working for a county government, we've got eyes on it. Gas stations are busy, stores are running out of water, and I'm planning on sending the wife and kids to Lakeland, because I might have to stay close by for work. If I have to, I can hunker down in my office.
We'll see what happens. I'm preparing now so my kids don't have to get scared by being stuck in a boarded up house with howling winds and storms outside. It could miss us, we could get slammed (current cycles seem to have it moving slightly to the NW, meaning we might get punched in the face. Still, an ounce of prevention.You guys seem to be right in the area where the storm will look like it's headed, but all the models are in agreement that it will turn north before it hits. Best of luck and I think it's smart to send the family away.
I live in Tennessee and we've had a long-planned trip to Disney this weekend for 2 days to see some family and take the kids to the park. I'm watching like a hawk..Orlando SHOULD be fine by Saturday morning, but I may be driving through some squall lines on Friday.
Looks like it going to be a buzzsaw along the east coast of FL.Slight west shift to the track.
When a hurricane moves north, the west side is usually much less severe than the east side. Hurricane David, in 1979, was a category 2 storm when it came within 100 miles of Miami, but we hardly knew there was a storm nearby.Living north of WPB and now working for a county government, we've got eyes on it. Gas stations are busy, stores are running out of water, and I'm planning on sending the wife and kids to Lakeland, because I might have to stay close by for work. If I have to, I can hunker down in my office.
You should be fine to leave Saturday morning but that Friday arrival looks very iffy. Probably too late to have her fly into Tampa instead.I've got large palms right in front of my house. If they fall, I have to pray it's towards the street. If they land on my house, it's game over. Also one in the backyard just outside the pool, if that falls on the screen room, it will cave it in.
Also have my wife flying from the west coast into Orlando landing at 5 AM Friday and we're supposed to be on a plane for Pittsburgh at 9 AM Saturday morning to go to the Steelers/Jets game Sunday. Any airport closures could really F this all up.
This storm has done a lot that nobody predicted. It was initially supposed to max out at a minor category 2 storm, then decided to go Super Saiyan (in a manner of speaking) and hit Category 5. Even now after running over the tallest mountains in Haiti, it's a category 4 storm, and when it moves into the Bahamas, well that's just more warm water to feed it.When a hurricane moves north, the west side is usually much less severe than the east side. Hurricane David, in 1979, was a category 2 storm when it came within 100 miles of Miami, but we hardly knew there was a storm nearby.
When a storm is moving west, like Hurricane Andrew, the strongest side is the north.
That's bad news for us, but great news for construction workers afterwards.Looks like it going to be a buzzsaw along the east coast of FL.
While it's never fun for the people that have to actually endure this hurricane, I will say that this has been a very captivating storm to track from afar. I knew it had potential when it was a large cluster of disorganized funk as it moved across the ocean, and it's gotten just about the perfect track and movement for it to grow into what it is (save for a bit of southwesterly shear when it was parked north of Columbia).This storm has done a lot that nobody predicted. It was initially supposed to max out at a minor category 2 storm, then decided to go Super Saiyan (in a manner of speaking) and hit Category 5. Even now after running over the tallest mountains in Haiti, it's a category 4 storm, and when it moves into the Bahamas, well that's just more warm water to feed it.
I told her earlier in the week to fly in Wednesday or Thursday night instead but she didn't listen. What an ###hole.You should be fine to leave Saturday morning but that Friday arrival looks very iffy. Probably too late to have her fly into Tampa instead.
As someone who was directly in the eye path of Charley in 2004, I can tell you it's a lot more fun tracking them from afar. Back then, I was a renter so I cared a lot less about structural damage than I do now owning my home. That storm was a frigging nightmare. No power for 10 days in summer in Florida is exceedingly un-fun.While it's never fun for the people that have to actually endure this hurricane, I will say that this has been a very captivating storm to track from afar. I knew it had potential when it was a large cluster of disorganized funk as it moved across the ocean, and it's gotten just about the perfect track and movement for it to grow into what it is (save for a bit of southwesterly shear when it was parked north of Columbia).
And yes, I too thought this would just wreck Hispaniola and go out to sea. We all did. Then Matthew parked itself in a quiet area and just waited and waited for the conditions north to change before making its move.
These things just fascinate the hell out of me, and my only experience with one was when I had to wait out Hurricane Elena in Tarpon Springs when I was three months old in 1985.
Les Cayes is the city most affected. Fortunately, Port-au-Prince was not really in the path and while they got bad weather and likely a TON of rain, they avoided the brunt. The Western-most part of Haiti doesn't look to be heavily populated, thank goodness.Have their been reports on how Haiti is doing?
What I can find on twitter doesn't look too bad, but I imagine that the Haitians with cell phones and internet access aren't the ones most likely affected by the storm.
Haiti's immediate problem is with almost no trees to hold the soil down, any rain can trigger landslides. Couple that with Category 4 winds, no real infrastructure to speak of, and lingering effects of a cholera outbreak, this does not bode well.Les Cayes is the city most affected. Fortunately, Port-au-Prince was not really in the path and while they got bad weather and likely a TON of rain, they avoided the brunt. The Western-most part of Haiti doesn't look to be heavily populated, thank goodness.
Ouch. Worst part is that it goes up the coast slower, too. Taking it a full 24 hours to get from Melbourne to Savannah.http://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/?model=ecmwf&region=us&pkg=z500_mslp&runtime=2016100412&fh=72&xpos=0&ypos=200
72-hour is showing a direct impact to Florida. This model run is very, very bad.
Do not like that one that's directly east of me.http://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/?model=ecmwf&region=us&pkg=z500_mslp&runtime=2016100412&fh=72&xpos=0&ypos=200
72-hour is showing a direct impact to Florida. This model run is very, very bad.
Somewhere between Jacksonville and Savannah it looks like.http://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/?model=ecmwf&region=us&pkg=z500_mslp&runtime=2016100412&fh=72&xpos=0&ypos=200
72-hour is showing a direct impact to Florida. This model run is very, very bad.
Again..it's just one run, and sometimes these computer models get some weird input and spit out nonsense..you can never take one run and consider it gospel. The NHC will be more conservative.Ouch. Worst part is that it goes up the coast slower, too. Taking it a full 24 hours to get from Melbourne to Savannah.
Yeah it really fell apart after the 120 hour mark. It almost looks as if it looped back around and struck Florida a 3rd time. This run was very odd.Euro had some issues with this run. Wait for the next to see if it becomes a trend.
Edoardo Mazza Yeah it really fell apart after the 120 hour mark. It almost looks as if it looped back around and struck Florida a 3rd time. This run was very odd.
The strange thing about the run is that they announced that the info was going to be an hour late, then it comes out and strikes the USA twice, then makes a loop and strikes a 3rd time.
I wonder if the NHC will ignore this run, we'll know soon enough.
Puts the NHC in a tough spot. They've got to deliver a major forecast, the "primetime" forecast, and their best model just either:
NHC is GFS lover.Puts the NHC in a tough spot. They've got to deliver a major forecast, the "primetime" forecast, and their best model just either:
A) Crapped the bed
or
B) Delivered a Cat4 hurricane right into the heart of Florida.
I suspect they'll move the cone west a little bit, put the entire Southeastern coast on major alert, and have a track that resembles the GFS as a coast-hugging hurricane from Florida up to NC.
Everyone head to the SC game!SC Carolina governor just asked residents to get 100 miles away from coast.
Isn't that like over half of the state?
Typically there is no traffic during hurricanes, they usually close the major roadways or issue advisories to stay off of them. Problems arise if there are downed trees or power lines after the storm passes through. That far inland, I doubt it will be that much of an issue.Question for anyone familiar with Florida traffic during hurricanes.
We are planning to travel to Orlando Friday and Sat (from TN). While the weather will be absolutely fine in Orlando by about Saturday at noon...is the traffic going to be a nightmare?
Traffic in Orlando is a nightmare on a perfect sunny day. So yes.Question for anyone familiar with Florida traffic during hurricanes.
We are planning to travel to Orlando Friday and Sat (from TN). While the weather will be absolutely fine in Orlando by about Saturday at noon...is the traffic going to be a nightmare?