skysummit wrote:She surely knows her stuff!!! Trying to suck up all that swampy water.
well she got alot of her experience from here peirs "Emily, Dennis, Arlene, Irene, Cindy, Franklin, Harvey"
and the pioners "Charley, Frances, Jeanne"
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jacindc wrote:Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:I can not believe what I'm seeing. I'm seeing the eye redeveloping over land.
I was about to post exactly the same thing. A strong band seems to be wrapping around the center on the northwest side again. (Watching the MIA short range base loop)
--jd


boca_chris wrote:Steve Lyons said that the Everglades will not weaken it much at all....the swamp is very similar to it being over the ocean....and the winds are still 80 mph!!!!
Stratusxpeye wrote:I can see a defin southwest movement of the entire convection. Well have to see the 11pm update. may start tpo recurve back west soon though. Its amazing its ben overland awhile and i see no sign of weekening at all. That tip that far south is all water though so i would assume it would maybe weeken to 70mph or so b4 hitting the golf in my opinion.

Praxus wrote:Looks nasty.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... IR4/20.jpg
Huge, boot shaped red area.


Sanibel wrote:I think it is obvious we have a serious Gulf hurricane developing. The IR is robust even after traversing land for over 6 hours. There's a huge deep feeder band with black tops feeding in from the hot Florida Straits.
It is still going SW on one of the craziest tracks I've ever seen. If it continues it will glance Key West from the NE! I don't think it will.
The good thing is Sanibel will see very little damage if it continues on this track.
The High obviously forced Katrina back into the moist flow following it up from the tropics.
81 degrees here at 1am.
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