By forming farther west, they don't have quite the potential for strength as if they came all the way across ... It hasn't had enough time to build up. |
Even though we've been lucky here so far, it's still been a huge hassle in terms of workload and I didn't plan on having to deal with all of that before my retirement, ... But, I'm still alive and I've got all my cruises lined up for the next five years. |
Fortunately, as far as we can tell, this is no Andrew. It should be a weak hurricane, more noted for rain than wind. |
In terms of the catastrophic situation that could have occurred, it wasn't the worst-case scenario, |
It will be just as hot at the beach as the inland areas, so there won't be any relief. |
It will go to the Swahili alphabet or something else, |
It's probably going to stand for quite a while because of the magnitude of it there. |
Most of the heavy weather will be here on Tuesday and be gone by Wednesday. Finally, a daytime hurricane, not like Katrina that hid in the night. |
Mother nature still has us in its sights. I hope it just wings us rather than hitting us in the gut. |
Rain will be as heavy, if not heavier. You don't want to be walking around out there with possible downed power lines and debris. It's not over until it's over. |
That will destabilize the air enough that we could see some pretty big thunderstorms, |
That will destabilize the air enough that we could see some pretty big thunderstorms. |
The bottom line: If you've got an area that has a hurricane warning, you should prepare regardless. |
They tend to form over the Bahamas or in the Caribbean and they can be here in 24 or 48 hours because they're so close to us. They're typical of early season storms, June, or October, in the late season, |
We don't know. It will go to the Swahili alphabet or something else, |