Surely,the MDR area is above average.Lets see how they are when the season gets into full gear.



Ed Mahmoud wrote:MDR toasty, but GOMEX still in the fridge. I smell a big Florida to New England season.
There were 3 planes flying in Rita up to landfall, and none of the planes could find Cat 3 winds in the 6-8 hours before landfall.Paul wrote:
Everyone forgets that its been 27 yrs now since we had a major...Ike was a cat 2...Alicia was a 3 albeit barely and thats open to debate. You would also have to say that its been a long time since Texas coast as a whole had anything above a Cat2..discounting Rita of course....Back in the 40's and 50's we saw some strong storms hit the Texas coast
wxman57 wrote:There were 3 planes flying in Rita up to landfall, and none of the planes could find Cat 3 winds in the 6-8 hours before landfall.Paul wrote:
Everyone forgets that its been 27 yrs now since we had a major...Ike was a cat 2...Alicia was a 3 albeit barely and thats open to debate. You would also have to say that its been a long time since Texas coast as a whole had anything above a Cat2..discounting Rita of course....Back in the 40's and 50's we saw some strong storms hit the Texas coast
NHC said that though they had considerable resources inside Rita just prior to landfall, they could not be 100% certain that there wasn't a small pocket of Cat 3 winds somewhere, so they left it a Cat 3 at landfall. I guess that's true for about any storm, though. I think they didn't want to take any more heat after downgrading Katrina to a Cat 3 earlier. Rita was sucking cool/dry air on its western side prior to landfall. That's why we hardly got any wind in Houston/Galveston from it.Paul wrote:
I agree Rita was weakening rapidly after bombing out with that crazy pressure..880's...I was stuck in East Bernard on a two lane country road with all of my fellow Pearlandians and their dogs when I heard that news. Made me stick out the wait for another hour or so then the cats threw up all over my back seat and the wife was threatening me with divorce. Turned around at that point...
I wonder why post report did not downgrade her. Any rate I wouldn't rule out any one location at this point...
I don't know if I'd say we hardly had any wind. I think there were reports of windows blown out downtown and I know our 5 year old brandford pear tree in our front yard was leaning to one side and branches and leaves were everywhere in the neighborhood.wxman57 wrote:NHC said that though they had considerable resources inside Rita just prior to landfall, they could not be 100% certain that there wasn't a small pocket of Cat 3 winds somewhere, so they left it a Cat 3 at landfall. I guess that's true for about any storm, though. I think they didn't want to take any more heat after downgrading Katrina to a Cat 3 earlier. Rita was sucking cool/dry air on its western side prior to landfall. That's why we hardly got any wind in Houston/Galveston from it.Paul wrote:
I agree Rita was weakening rapidly after bombing out with that crazy pressure..880's...I was stuck in East Bernard on a two lane country road with all of my fellow Pearlandians and their dogs when I heard that news. Made me stick out the wait for another hour or so then the cats threw up all over my back seat and the wife was threatening me with divorce. Turned around at that point...
I wonder why post report did not downgrade her. Any rate I wouldn't rule out any one location at this point...
Candy Cane wrote:I don't know if I'd say we hardly had any wind. I think there were reports of windows blown out downtown and I know our 5 year old brandford pear tree in our front yard was leaning to one side and branches and leaves were everywhere in the neighborhood.wxman57 wrote:NHC said that though they had considerable resources inside Rita just prior to landfall, they could not be 100% certain that there wasn't a small pocket of Cat 3 winds somewhere, so they left it a Cat 3 at landfall. I guess that's true for about any storm, though. I think they didn't want to take any more heat after downgrading Katrina to a Cat 3 earlier. Rita was sucking cool/dry air on its western side prior to landfall. That's why we hardly got any wind in Houston/Galveston from it.Paul wrote:
I agree Rita was weakening rapidly after bombing out with that crazy pressure..880's...I was stuck in East Bernard on a two lane country road with all of my fellow Pearlandians and their dogs when I heard that news. Made me stick out the wait for another hour or so then the cats threw up all over my back seat and the wife was threatening me with divorce. Turned around at that point...
I wonder why post report did not downgrade her. Any rate I wouldn't rule out any one location at this point...
We were discussing Rita, not Ike. Rita produced only very minimal TS winds across Houston - 35-45 mph. We had stronger than that with that behind that cold front a few weeks ago. Here's a plot of Rita's wind field across SE TX:Candy Cane wrote:those windows were blown out because of the location of the Chase tower and Chase building. They created a wind tunnel. Once one window went the rest followed. I believe we lost 300 something windows....Paul wrote: I don't know if I'd say we hardly had any wind. I think there were reports of windows blown out downtown and I know our 5 year old Bradford pear tree in our front yard was leaning to one side and branches and leaves were everywhere in the neighborhood.
The Caribbean is primed for hurricanes with the warm water. It would be an active spot right now, if it was not for the wind shear. The Gulf of Mexico is hostile for any development. That is due to the cooler winter we had.Paul wrote:and so it begins.....
http://wxmaps.org/pix/hurpot.html#ATL
no where but up from here on out.