#45 Postby soonertwister » Fri Oct 21, 2005 7:25 pm
I believe that Wilma has started her turn to the northeast. Don't think she will get farther west, may not get the eyewall completely over land.
The latest motion looks quite unlike a wobble, and she's now moving about 10-15 degrees east of due north.
But she's weakening noticeably right now as observed on IR. How much much she can intensify in cooler waters and with increasing shear is questionable. Earlier today I imagined the possibility of Wilma moving farther north by sheer system inertia, but the same forces that have turned her (in my admittedly amateur estimation) will keep her to the south side of the forecast track. May track as far south as over Key West and right into Miami, in fact. The question is, what kind of storm would arrive there? That would also mean a faster arrival time by quite a few hours.
Or it could be that she tries to take a more northerly track and keeps bumping into that trough, ripping herself to pieces in futility.
I certainly hope for the scenario that rips her apart, leaving nothing but tropical squalls as she hits the US mainland.
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