Chances of Storm Hitting as Far East as New Orleans?
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samanthahunter
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Chances of Storm Hitting as Far East as New Orleans?
As the track has been right of forecast all day, is it possible to go "wide right" like Ivan, like Katrina. Just curious over here in Mobile AL. We had models going to Mexico several days ago and that cone gets closer and closer by the day. Thanks.
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- CaptinCrunch
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new orleans looked dead on track the entire time for katrina and then took that hard right...who knows, it is possible, not probable but not as far fetched as some on here would have you believe
the "hard right" was forecast and hit within 20 miles....this would be a 300mile unforecast "bobble".....the mother of all bobbles.
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Here in North Carolina, local TV WRAL Met has a weather model called the NC Weather Scope. It was developed by several people including Greg Fishal, the Met at WRAL. Last night he compared NCWS to the GFDL....GFDL moved the storm to around G-ston, NCWS moved it to the LA coast. He again compared Rita's movement today to the (2) models. Guess what? NCWS was dead on with todays movement, the GFDL continuing its move to the Texas coast, to far to the left. I don't know if the NCWS will continue with it's great job. But it has done very well with Rita since the Fla coast.............
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- beachbum_al
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wolfray wrote:Here in North Carolina, local TV WRAL Met has a weather model called the NC Weather Scope. It was developed by several people including Greg Fishal, the Met at WRAL. Last night he compared NCWS to the GFDL....GFDL moved the storm to around G-ston, NCWS moved it to the LA coast. He again compared Rita's movement today to the (2) models. Guess what? NCWS was dead on with todays movement, the GFDL continuing its move to the Texas coast, to far to the left. I don't know if the NCWS will continue with it's great job. But it has done very well with Rita since the Fla coast.............
So... I wonder what the NCWS is indicating this evening - in real time?
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Mississippi Storm Magnet
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