txsnowmaker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 5:29 pm
If the NHC forecast cone holds up, the Houston Metro area has definitely dodged a bullet. We’ve really been lucky here, especially considering we’ve never had to deal with a Cat 4 or 5 riding up through Freeport/Matagorda, putting the city on the worst side of it.
Unfortunately me in Beaumont hasnt dodged that bullet and any further west, I will be in the eye. AGAIN!! Just got back from doing last minute errands and preps and its a madhouse out there. Lines for gas. Now limiting how many customers in stores. Issuing out water, gas can, generators. Traffic on I-10 is at a stand still here. Reminds me of the chaos before rita and the doom and gloom before Ike. Currently not a good feeling. With Harvey/Imelda PTSD, My nerves are already shot. Today we are looking around thinking enjoy the electricity as much as possible. Cook a good meal. Enjoy the luxuries cause it about to all come to an abrupt end. Praying no more shifts west. Went through eye of Rita and Ike. Not fun!!
Glad we left this morning, and I feel your pain. I'm in Lakeway at in laws and I'm researching property as we speak. I'm SO tired of living year to year i S.E. Tx.....it's just a different place now....just not worth it.
Ah, Lakeway, good, common sense, citizenry... unlike most urban areas in 2020.
As for Laura, I still have a hunch the models are undergoing the ridging in the SE.
18z HMON with a very sheared storm moving almost due north towards landfall central LA. I have to believe this is due to it forecasting a weaker storm.
Here’s part of what Dr. Siebert just said on Fox 26:
“There are some clues that the atmosphere is giving us...so just like what’s going on right now in the atmosphere, this storm is going to follow that same pattern. So that gives us some clues as to why we think it’s going to take that right hand turn and possibly move a little bit more to the east and not to the west.”
txsnowmaker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 6:07 pm
Here’s part of what Dr. Siebert just said on Fox 26:
“There are some clues that the atmosphere is giving us...so just like what’s going on right now in the atmosphere, this storm is going to follow that same pattern. So that gives us some clues as to why we think it’s going to take that right hand turn and possibly move a little bit more to the east and not to the west.”
i like that - i've just been put under a voluntary evacuation notice.
I'm still on to Sw la hit.
Just because you're disabled, you don't have to be a victim
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djmike wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 5:39 pm
Unfortunately me in Beaumont hasnt dodged that bullet and any further west, I will be in the eye. AGAIN!! Just got back from doing last minute errands and preps and its a madhouse out there. Lines for gas. Now limiting how many customers in stores. Issuing out water, gas can, generators. Traffic on I-10 is at a stand still here. Reminds me of the chaos before rita and the doom and gloom before Ike. Currently not a good feeling. With Harvey/Imelda PTSD, My nerves are already shot. Today we are looking around thinking enjoy the electricity as much as possible. Cook a good meal. Enjoy the luxuries cause it about to all come to an abrupt end. Praying no more shifts west. Went through eye of Rita and Ike. Not fun!!
Glad we left this morning, and I feel your pain. I'm in Lakeway at in laws and I'm researching property as we speak. I'm SO tired of living year to year i S.E. Tx.....it's just a different place now....just not worth it.
Ah, Lakeway, good, common sense, citizenry... unlike most urban areas in 2020.
As for Laura, I still have a hunch the models are undergoing the ridging in the SE.
Fewer tornadoes, hurricanes, 500 year floods every 3 years. That would work!
We were inundated in 1994 by 18 inches of rain in 18 hours, not long after we moved to College Station. In 2008 we moved to a house where the land slopes and drains away from the house - on all sides!
HWRF comes in right at the border. Sub 930. While trivial and obsessing over the small changes. Another shift to the w and it begins to bring areas a little further down the coast in play. Either way it's a rough run for the Golden triangle.
Scott747 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 6:43 pm
HWRF comes in right at the border. Sub 930. While trivial and obsessing over the small changes. Another shift to the w and it begins to bring areas a little further down the coast in play. Either way it's a rough run for the Golden triangle.
Scott747 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 24, 2020 6:43 pm
HWRF comes in right at the border. Sub 930. While trivial and obsessing over the small changes. Another shift to the w and it begins to bring areas a little further down the coast in play. Either way it's a rough run for the Golden triangle.
Attached. Too close to the Metro for ANY comfort.
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