Wyndstryker
Member
Anytime the satellite images of the hurricane have "Off the scale" colors and the hurricane is mostly that color, it's gonna be a disaster.
Stay safe down there.
Stay safe down there.
Every hurricane is different and has different types of impacts. Katrina's largest threat ended up being its storm surge, which peaked at over 30ft. There was some wind damage near the core, sure, but that was not the major thing. Plus even at peak it wasn't as intense as this storm.for someone who lives in the uk and who doesn't get weather like this is this Katrina sort of bad
Every hurricane is different and has different types of impacts. Katrina's largest threat ended up being its storm surge, which peaked at over 30ft. There was some wind damage near the core, sure, but that was not the major thing. Plus even at peak it wasn't as intense as this storm.
Katrina's maximum winds peaked something like 36-48 hours before landfall and is had a weakening spurt in the hours leading to landfall, but it had a gigantic wind field that spanned hundreds of miles. All that wind pushes water up and closer to shore. Take that + the "bathtub" nature of the Gulf of Mexico and that water has nowhere to go but onshore to either flood or give a stress test to control systems. And we know how that went for New Orleans.
Patricia is the second-strongest hurricane in recorded history, and the strongest ever for anywhere besides the western pacific. It may well have intensified to the absolute most intense recorded. Wind is an absolutely an issue at category 5+ levels, but these types of storms have very narrow areas of highest speeds and have limited time to create a storm surge. This is a formula for catastrophic damage in a relatively narrow stretch of coast but fewer wide impacts (torrential rain not included). We're also lucky it'll be making landfall soon, however contradictory that sounds.
Here's an example of something sorta like this happening a decade ago in Florida. Small storm, narrow damage area but very extreme in that zone.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Charley
Yeah, you wouldn't be standing for long.what would happen to me if I stood there and watched the whole thing? Would it blow me away?
When is it scheduled to hit shore ? And are they evacuating ?
what would happen to me if I stood there and watched the whole thing? Would it blow me away?
7:00 AM CDT Fri Oct 23
Location: 17.3°N 105.6°W
Moving: NNW at 12 mph
Min pressure: 880 mb
Max sustained: 200 mph
I have family that lives 50 miles north of Manzanillo in La Huerta, like, a lot of family.
7pm-ish Central. The projected landfall zone at the core is mostly small villages, though the ways in and out are basically one 2 lane highway and a couple mountain roads, so evacuation may be difficult, though absolutely necessary.
Other hazards would be flooding in the mountains/hills. I am a bit worried about my wife's family in Guadalajara, which I am sure will get some severe flooding.
245mph now, holy shit, this thing is gonna be devastating.
Where did you get that info?
morning radio news
No recon flight out there but intensity just based on satellite presentation has broken the Dvorak scale.
No recon flight out there but intensity just based on satellite presentation has broken the Dvorak scale.
Holy shit it broke Dvorak, its over 200mph and...
Holy fuck what a beast
So basically this hurricane is like a category 6 if that category existed?
So basically this hurricane is like a category 6 if that category existed?