JimMIA
There's more to life than mice...
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 21,168
Overnight Hurricane Wilma has been upgraded to a Category FIVE hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 175 MPH, and gusts approaching 215 MPH. The central pressure of the storm may be the lowest (most intense) ever recorded in an Atlantic storm.
People in Florida, or coming to Florida this weekend should watch Wilma carefully. The storm is expected to weaken over the next three days, but it will still probably strike the lower west coast of Florida as a major hurricane with winds in the 120-140 MPH range.
The track of Wilma is going to be very deceptive to folks not used to watching hurricanes. Wilma is going to remain a major hurricane and plod NW through the northwestern Caribbean, either over the Yucatan (Mexico) or through the Yucatan Channel separating Mexico from Cuba. But soon after entering the Gulf of Mexico, Wilma is projected to make a sudden 90-degree shift in direction, gain speed rapidly, and dart toward Florida.
The expectations are for very slow movement before the turn, and then very, very fast movement toward Florida. Wilma is expected to move from the tip of the Yucatan to the Florida coast in less than 24 hours, and the timing of the storm is such that much of that movement will occur overnight Saturday.
Predicting a hurricane's movement 5 days out is very difficult, but the trend of the computer models has been moving the storm slightly westward with each advisory -- and, after the turn, that translates to a landfall more northward on the Florida coast. It would not take much of a shift to the west/north to bring the hurricane directly over WDW during the weekend.
The best source of accurate information -- as opposed to media hype -- is the National Hurricane Center website: www.nhc.noaa.gov
People in Florida, or coming to Florida this weekend should watch Wilma carefully. The storm is expected to weaken over the next three days, but it will still probably strike the lower west coast of Florida as a major hurricane with winds in the 120-140 MPH range.
The track of Wilma is going to be very deceptive to folks not used to watching hurricanes. Wilma is going to remain a major hurricane and plod NW through the northwestern Caribbean, either over the Yucatan (Mexico) or through the Yucatan Channel separating Mexico from Cuba. But soon after entering the Gulf of Mexico, Wilma is projected to make a sudden 90-degree shift in direction, gain speed rapidly, and dart toward Florida.
The expectations are for very slow movement before the turn, and then very, very fast movement toward Florida. Wilma is expected to move from the tip of the Yucatan to the Florida coast in less than 24 hours, and the timing of the storm is such that much of that movement will occur overnight Saturday.
Predicting a hurricane's movement 5 days out is very difficult, but the trend of the computer models has been moving the storm slightly westward with each advisory -- and, after the turn, that translates to a landfall more northward on the Florida coast. It would not take much of a shift to the west/north to bring the hurricane directly over WDW during the weekend.
The best source of accurate information -- as opposed to media hype -- is the National Hurricane Center website: www.nhc.noaa.gov