JimMIA
There's more to life than mice...
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 21,168
Irene did two important things last night -- she became a Category One Hurricane and she unexpectedly crossed over Puerto Rico. The storm is currently just off the north coast of Puerto Rico, with 75 MPH winds, and moving WNW at about 10 Kt.
It DOES look like Hurricane Irene will affect both Vero Beach and Orlando (much less effect in Orlando), and probably also HHI.
The current official forecase shows Irene moving along the north side of Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti) today and tomorrow. One critical factor for this storm is how much it interacts with the mountains on Hispaniola -- if it interacts a LOT, the storm should weaken, but if it doesn't interact much, the storm should strengthen. It appears very unlikely that this storm will just fall apart over Hispaniola because the storm center will be over water and only the weaker left side of the storm will be hitting the mountains. Also, as the storm moves further west, it will enter an area of very warm sea water, which will enable more strengthening.
The current official track predicts the storm will pass through the Bahamas and just offshore of Florida's lower East Coast. It predicts actual landfall a little North of Vero Beach very early FRIDAY morning as a Category Two storm. On that track, two of the models show the storm very close to major hurricane strength (Category Three). A Category Two storm would obviously have strong effects on VB and the Orlando area would probably have bad, but not horrible, weather. It's doubtful that Orlando would have hurricane force winds.
The official track shows the storm hugging the Florida East Coast and going ashore in Georgia on Sunday, still a Cat Two storm. Obviously, that would affect HHI, and a slight shift to the right could put HHI in the bullseye.
The thing that troubles us here in Miami is that one of the most reliable models takes the storm right over Miami and across the state to the Gulf Coast. That model shows the storm a little weaker, but still a solid Category One Hurricane. For now, we're going to be planning conservatively and will probably be putting up shutters later this week.
It's still too early to freak out, but this storm definitely bears watching if you're going to be anywhere in South or Central Florida this week.
It DOES look like Hurricane Irene will affect both Vero Beach and Orlando (much less effect in Orlando), and probably also HHI.
The current official forecase shows Irene moving along the north side of Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti) today and tomorrow. One critical factor for this storm is how much it interacts with the mountains on Hispaniola -- if it interacts a LOT, the storm should weaken, but if it doesn't interact much, the storm should strengthen. It appears very unlikely that this storm will just fall apart over Hispaniola because the storm center will be over water and only the weaker left side of the storm will be hitting the mountains. Also, as the storm moves further west, it will enter an area of very warm sea water, which will enable more strengthening.
The current official track predicts the storm will pass through the Bahamas and just offshore of Florida's lower East Coast. It predicts actual landfall a little North of Vero Beach very early FRIDAY morning as a Category Two storm. On that track, two of the models show the storm very close to major hurricane strength (Category Three). A Category Two storm would obviously have strong effects on VB and the Orlando area would probably have bad, but not horrible, weather. It's doubtful that Orlando would have hurricane force winds.
The official track shows the storm hugging the Florida East Coast and going ashore in Georgia on Sunday, still a Cat Two storm. Obviously, that would affect HHI, and a slight shift to the right could put HHI in the bullseye.
The thing that troubles us here in Miami is that one of the most reliable models takes the storm right over Miami and across the state to the Gulf Coast. That model shows the storm a little weaker, but still a solid Category One Hurricane. For now, we're going to be planning conservatively and will probably be putting up shutters later this week.
It's still too early to freak out, but this storm definitely bears watching if you're going to be anywhere in South or Central Florida this week.
