oopsiee Florida

Scary stuff. Are you close to the coast??

Just can't even imagine the anxiety and worries esp. given the uncertainty and frequent changes the SPC and NHC are giving. Did you see this about the Eyewall Replacement Cycle currently in progress?

https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/D...aken-and-Expand-Due-Eyewall-Replacement-Cycle

Yep she's been busy today recreating that new eye wall. It still looks a little
raggedy and it will weaken her a bit as well. I'm in the center of the state in Ocala.
I got hit HARD with Irma 2 years ago when she came in dead on. The center of the
state is more prone to spawning twisters, luckily none nailed me.
I'm used to them, just have to prepare and do your best with whatever you get
handed to deal with.

I recommend the real pros in Miami at https://www.local10.com/weather/hurricane/hurricane-dorian-9-2-19
They're still doing a live feed....been on for a few hours now. :cool:
 
Another huge fail for the stupid Muslim Yankee. I'm more scared of a spider than I am this hurricane. Irma arrived at night, 3:00 am -- and I was asleep. It was a nothing burger.

The only thing I'm concerned about is losing power and A/C which may not even happen, in which case I will merely enjoy an unplanned, paid day off. lmao

Stupid Yankee.

poor southern snowflakes and trailer dwelling pants shitters , I have been through 8 hurricanes every thing from Hazel ,Donna to Hugo to Fran Floyd and Mathew
 
poor southern snowflakes and pants shitters , I have been through 8 hurricanes every thing from Hazel ,Donna to Hugo to Fran Floyd and Mathew
Floyd and Mathew didn't do anything, Muzzie Wuzzie. The others didn't do much either.

You lying Mooslim raghead.
 
Dorian stationary, storm surge potential high across Grand Strand


Dorian has become nearly stationary this afternoon. A slow westward to west- northwestward motion is expected to resume overnight and continue into early Tuesday. A turn toward the northwest is forecast by late Tuesday, with a northeastward motion forecast to begin by Wednesday night. On this track, the core of extremely dangerous Hurricane Dorian will continue to pound Grand Bahama Island into Tuesday morning. The hurricane will then move dangerously close to the Florida east coast late Tuesday through Wednesday evening and then move dangerously close to the Georgia and South Carolina coasts on Wednesday night and Thursday.


https://www.wmbfnews.com/2019/09/02...orm-surge-potential-high-across-grand-strand/
 
Hurricane Dorian’s destructive path through the Bahamas as a Category 5 storm was just the start of what figures to be a storm affecting much of the southeastern Unites States and perhaps millions of people along the coasts of Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina.

With Dorian’s path still to play out, here are 5 things we already know about Hurricane Dorian, its impact and its place in hurricane lore.

1. With sustained winds speeds of 185 mph, Dorian is tied for the second-strongest Atlantic hurricane by wind speed since 1851, along with Wilma (2005), Gilbert (1988) and Labor Day (1935). The only storm with higher wind speeds was Hurrricane Allen in 1980 with 190 mph winds –- a storm that provided a trove of scientific information, which led to insights about storm dynamics, precipitation structure and eyewall replacement cycles, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).


https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/5-things-to-know-about-hurricane-dorian/525818
 
A night time hit is not good

Dorian expected to get "dangerously" close to Florida tonight
While Hurricane Dorian creeps along at 1 mph, the storm is expected to get "dangerously" close to the US tonight, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The Category 4 storm is moving in a westward to west-northwestward motion, which should be followed by a gradual turn toward the northwest and north, the center said in its 11 a.m. ET advisory.
https://www.cnn.com/us/live-news/hurricane-dorian-september-2019/index.html

This storm ain't goin' anywhere tonight.
 
Yep she's been busy today recreating that new eye wall. It still looks a little
raggedy and it will weaken her a bit as well. I'm in the center of the state in Ocala.
I got hit HARD with Irma 2 years ago when she came in dead on. The center of the
state is more prone to spawning twisters, luckily none nailed me.
I'm used to them, just have to prepare and do your best with whatever you get
handed to deal with.

I recommend the real pros in Miami at https://www.local10.com/weather/hurricane/hurricane-dorian-9-2-19
They're still doing a live feed....been on for a few hours now. :cool:

Wishing you and everyone else on the Right Coast the best of luck with this monster. There are three more invests out there as well. With any luck, Dorian will rob them of storm energy, and continue his projected path along the coast rather than inland.
 
Dorian doesn't deter residents at Riviera Beach mobile home park, who vow to stand firm


Marschat and others at Ocean Tide mobile home park were holding fast to the tin can domiciles and tiny wooden cottages they called home despite now being in a mandatory evacuation zone and urged by police the day before to go to a shelter.

"I grew up on this ocean," said Marschat, 65. "It'll be fun.":eek:


https://www.news-press.com/story/we...beach-trailer-park-vow-stand-firm/2191918001/
 
poor uneducated southern goyim

Utility crews from further north were already on their way to Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas to help with any power outages.:palm:

Fuck you, trash.

I hope ISIS gets your trash family.
 
Fuck you, trash.

I hope ISIS gets your trash family.

A high pressure system in Bermuda has been acting like a wall, keeping Dorian from heading north. But a low pressure trough moving east from the Midwest has eroded that high and is trying to pull Dorian north. Those two weather systems “are fighting it out and neither is winning,” Masters said.

There’s just no flow pushing it anywhere. Think of it like a tiny paper boat or a pebble in a stagnant pond, which just doesn’t move, said Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach.

Air — high off the ground and closer to where people live — is often stagnant in the summer and this is an extreme version of that, Masters said.

may still crash right into Florida
 
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