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-   -   Hurricane Florence (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showthread.php?t=1007357)

GothingNC 09-09-2018 11:52 AM

Hurricane Florence
 
Does not look good :-(



Florence: the “Harvey of the East Coast”?
The models are increasingly on board with a scenario where the trough of low pressure that was expected to turn the hurricane to the north late this week will be too weak to do so, as a strong ridge of high pressure builds over the Mid-Atlantic. This “blocking ridge” would block Florence’s forward progress. Florence might then stall and wander near or over the coast for as many as six days, becoming the “Harvey of the East Coast”, dumping prodigious amounts of rain. The analogue would be especially strong if Florence slams inland as a major hurricane with a first round of impacts—as did Harvey near Rockport, Texas—and then stalls to produce a multiday flood disaster, as Harvey ended up doing in southeast TX.

PetrolBlueSC 09-09-2018 11:58 AM

My daughter is a freshman at UNCW. Luckily, I have a great friend 5 minutes from campus that can take her in or take her when he evacuates. I will be tracking this very closely.

Craig T 09-09-2018 12:06 PM

If this tears up Hilton Head again, my retirement move in 2019 is gonna change. Pinehurst, NC and Bend, Or are looking better by the minute.

Good luck to all you guys in the area. Time for a little vacation to Asheville.

GothingNC 09-09-2018 12:18 PM

I hope Asheville does not get flooded out again.
City already had a rough summer with major flooding.

KFC911 09-09-2018 01:17 PM

This don't look good down east....at all :(.
Mathew was bad enough....

ckelly78z 09-09-2018 02:47 PM

I'm keeping my eyes on this for this upcoming weekend. We are camping near Athens Ohio
, which is near the Ohio river at WV. I feel for all the folks on the coast that have far more at risk than a wet weekend.

Pazuzu 09-09-2018 04:37 PM

It might ruin our trip, we are planning on landing in Charlotte on Monday the 17 and spending 5 days wandering around to Atlanta...

Guess we need to bring our Harvey gear with us!

A930Rocket 09-09-2018 05:13 PM

We are keeping an eye on it, but I think the worst will go north of us in Charleston.....At least that's what I keep telling myself. Good luck everyone.

red-beard 09-09-2018 07:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GothingNC (Post 10174635)
Does not look good :-(



Florence: the “Harvey of the East Coast”?
The models are increasingly on board with a scenario where the trough of low pressure that was expected to turn the hurricane to the north late this week will be too weak to do so, as a strong ridge of high pressure builds over the Mid-Atlantic. This “blocking ridge” would block Florence’s forward progress. Florence might then stall and wander near or over the coast for as many as six days, becoming the “Harvey of the East Coast”, dumping prodigious amounts of rain. The analogue would be especially strong if Florence slams inland as a major hurricane with a first round of impacts—as did Harvey near Rockport, Texas—and then stalls to produce a multiday flood disaster, as Harvey ended up doing in southeast TX.

Oh I hope not. Our land here is fairly flat, so the water spread out. With the hills, valleys and mountains, you will end up with lots of deep, concentrated flooding, even if you do not get the 30-60" of rain we did.

I saw what 7-8" did in Baltimore.

KFC911 09-09-2018 07:40 PM

The one two years ago made a lot of eastern NC one big lake...and the further inland one goes....worse. I actually had flooding on my property a few months ago....local storms. Storms like this make local....everywhere :(

red-beard 09-09-2018 07:41 PM

000
WTNT41 KNHC 092053
TCDAT1

Hurricane Florence Discussion Number 42
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL062018
500 PM AST Sun Sep 09 2018

The last reconnaissance fix indicated that the pressure had fallen
to about 978 mb with Florence, a drop of about 6 mb in 4 hours, with
uncontaminated SFMR winds of about 70 kt. Since then, the satellite
presentation has continued to improve, with intensifying deep
convection near the center. Thus the wind speed is set to 75 kt on
this advisory.

Radar data from the NOAA Hurricane Hunter indicated that there were
still a few breaks in the eyewall, possibly allowing some dry air to
mix into the core. This structure has potentially kept Florence
from intensifying rapidly so far. It is likely, however, that the
eyewall will close soon with low environmental shear present,
resulting in a faster intensification rate. The guidance is
remarkably well clustered, with all of the hurricane models showing
category 4 strength within 48 hours, which is uncommon given the
current intensity. The new forecast continues to show rapid
intensification and is increased 5 or 10 kt at most time periods,
but it is still not as high as the Florida State Superensemble or
the NOAA corrected consensus models. It is worth noting that the
model guidance is also significantly increasing the size of
Florence's wind field over the next few days, and the official
forecast reflects this trend.

The fixes from the aircraft indicate that Florence hasn't gained
much latitude yet, and continues moving westward at about 6 kt.
There is no change to the synoptic reason as a very strong ridge is
forecast to build over the northwestern Atlantic during the next few
days. This pattern should steer Florence west-northwestward at a
much faster forward speed by Tuesday. On Wednesday, the hurricane
will likely turn northwestward and slow down somewhat due to another
ridge forming over the Ohio Valley. The most notable change from
the previous advisory is that most of the models are showing a
faster motion in 3 or 4 days, which unfortunately increases the risk
of a destructive hurricane landfall. The GFS and its ensemble mean
are outliers from the main model envelope, showing the system near
the Outer Banks, while the rest of the guidance is well to the
southwest. While a near-miss isn't impossible given the spread of
the ECMWF Ensemble, there is much more support for a track to the
southwest, especially considering the poleward bias of the GFS thus
far this season. Therefore, the official track forecast is shifted a
little bit to the southwest, and is very close to the
corrected-consensus models.

The NOAA G-IV jet is conducting a synoptic surveillance mission this
afternoon to gather data near and around Florence for assimilation
into the numerical models, and these missions will continue through
Tuesday. In addition, upper-air stations across portions of the
central and eastern U.S. are conducting special 0600 UTC and 1800
UTC radiosonde launches to collect extra data for the numerical
models. Hopefully these data will help improve the track and
intensity forecasts.

Key Messages:

1. There is an increasing risk of two life-threatening impacts from
Florence: storm surge at the coast and freshwater flooding from a
prolonged heavy rainfall event inland. While it is too soon to
determine the exact timing, location, and magnitude of these
impacts, interests at the coast and inland from South Carolina into
the mid-Atlantic region should closely monitor the progress of
Florence, ensure they have their hurricane plan in place, and follow
any advice given by local officials.

2. Large swells affecting Bermuda and portions of the U.S. East
Coast will continue this week. These swells will result in
life-threatening surf and rip currents.

GothingNC 09-09-2018 08:00 PM

Looks like a repeat of Fran :-(
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1536548397.png

KFC911 09-10-2018 03:15 AM

^^^^ Indeed....this is gonna be a bad one :(. The ground is already saturated here....I've hed several big trees downed in recent weeks...it looks like it'll have mebbe 50 mph winds by reaching my area....get ready....you're gonna get it much worse....be safe.

edited.... 70 mph here....down east and Wilmington 140...direct hit. If I had a kid at UNCW there woud be an evacuation order.

GothingNC 09-10-2018 03:45 AM

UNCW has a voluntary evacuation now.

https://uncw.edu/news/2018/09/Alert-UNCW-Issues-Voluntary-Evacuation-for-Students,-Starting-at-12-p.m.,-Monday,-Sept.-10.html

ckelly78z 09-10-2018 03:55 AM

140 MPH winds are life threatening, and can't be walked through. Anyone near the coast should get out now, or tomorrow. Bravery stops, and stupidity starts in winds (and rains) that hard.

T77911S 09-10-2018 04:05 AM

here in myrtle beach.

if this one hit here as a 4 I was getting out. worried about the 930.
looks like Wilmington or maybe further north.

had no power for almost a week after the last one. was not that big a deal as it was not hot. took quick showers so only one or 2 cold ones.

GothingNC 09-10-2018 04:21 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1536578474.jpg

Rickysa 09-10-2018 04:45 AM

Well, that just plain sucks.

tevake 09-10-2018 05:22 AM

Let's hope that the high to the north breaks up or moves to the east to allow the hurricane to travel off to the north.

Having it come ashore and get parked there is not a good scenario. Looks to be an impactful storm at anyway, But doubly so if it stays in one area for a long time.

I've got space for dry camping at my place near Panama City fl. Pine Log State forest park next door has a handful of sites open too, for those that are thinking of headin south.

Best of luck to all in the area.

Cheers Richard

URY914 09-10-2018 05:36 AM

The best website for storm tracking....

https://www.windy.com


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