Sanibel damage reports surprising

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Aimless
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Sanibel damage reports surprising

#1 Postby Aimless » Thu Aug 19, 2004 12:26 pm

Tv and newspaper reports today seem to indicate the damage at Sanibel was much less than expected. Thank goodness, I had always loved that area. Any thoughts on why they were spared. I would have expected much more damage from a surge. They were on the south side of the storm at landfall, so maybe that had something to do with it??? What are your thoughts....
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Derek Ortt

#2 Postby Derek Ortt » Thu Aug 19, 2004 12:27 pm

The eye wall jogged just north of them. It made a last minute due north wobble, bringing the eye wall over only the extreme western protions of that island
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#3 Postby furluvcats » Thu Aug 19, 2004 12:27 pm

Alot of prayer? :)
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#4 Postby Dave C » Thu Aug 19, 2004 1:03 pm

When you look at the radar loop someone provided here a few days ago of landfall that jog was definately the saving grace for Fort Myers. It was dead on track for them until that last hr or so then came the wobble to the N. that sent it up Punta Gordas direction. It must have seen Jim Cantore and jumped north!!
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#5 Postby BL03 » Thu Aug 19, 2004 1:06 pm

Image

Image
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#6 Postby WXBUFFJIM » Thu Aug 19, 2004 1:22 pm

The eye was 20 miles northwest of Sanibel and impacted the Captiva Island instead. The southeastern eyewall just knicked the northwest portion of Sanibel. Captiva points north and east to the Port Charlotte Harbor area were the highest impact zones. Only a small area within the eyewall saw the strongest winds and luckily most of Sanibel except the extreme northwest portion of that island wasn't in that core of strongest winds, hence much less damage. This was a small sized hurricane anyway, which was a good thing overall. Imagine if this was a larger sized system, you get the idea. But the devastation is still amazing in the Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte area. Also noticing the footage and Captiva was much harder hit compared to Sanibel and it all had to do with the position of the eyewall. Captiva got the eyewall and got the strongest winds for a long period of time. It wasn't surprising to see a 400 foot wide cut of the barrier island in this type of storm.

Jim
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#7 Postby Stephanie » Thu Aug 19, 2004 1:54 pm

Thanks BL03 for the graphic.

Hopefully that's the closest a Cat 4 gets to that region ever! :eek:
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#8 Postby Josephine96 » Thu Aug 19, 2004 1:57 pm

Category 4's are serious business.. Any hurricane is serious business.. Just ask me and anyone else who has to clean up wind damage from the storm..

{Is still praying for my lights to return}
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#9 Postby Aimless » Thu Aug 19, 2004 2:56 pm

Thanks WXBUFFJIM & BLO3 for the explainations and graphics. I had thought 20 miles away wouldn't have been far enough to be spared ( not that there wasn't alot of damage).
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#10 Postby furluvcats » Thu Aug 19, 2004 3:40 pm

Tonya from Independence, MO writes:
My comment below is regarding the Bubble Room. NBC-2 has a story on that.

(Comment 174 of 200. Posted at 05:08 PM EDT, 08/18/2004)
• Click here to add your comments!

Tonya from Independence, MO writes:
NBC-2.com has a story on this. It sustained damage but was not completely destroyed. Needs a lot of work though.

(Comment 173 of 200. Posted at 05:06 PM EDT, 08/18/2004)
• Click here to add your comments!

Theres the info I found on "THE BUBBLE ROOM", in which I keep inquiring about...
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#11 Postby vbhoutex » Thu Aug 19, 2004 3:55 pm

Aimless wrote:Thanks WXBUFFJIM & BLO3 for the explainations and graphics. I had thought 20 miles away wouldn't have been far enough to be spared ( not that there wasn't alot of damage).


Another good example of this more concentrated damage is when Andrew came into Dade county only(someone correct me here)20 miles South of downtown Miami and the damage in Homestead, as we all know was unimaginable and downtown Miami sustained minimal damage compared to only 20 miles away where everything was obliterated. It is very strange what a few miles difference can make when one is looking at a tight compact storm as opposed to one like Hugo or Floyd(in size).
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#12 Postby ColdFront77 » Thu Aug 19, 2004 4:04 pm

David, Homestead is 25 to 30 miles southwest of Miami.
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#13 Postby BL03 » Thu Aug 19, 2004 5:13 pm

Here are some more!

Radar
Image
Radar
Image
Radar shot
Image
Infrared Img
Image
Water Vapor
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Visible img
Image
Sat and Radar of Charley
Image

Just because the eye was small doesn't mean it was a small Hurricane because photos show it wasn't!
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Derek Ortt

#14 Postby Derek Ortt » Thu Aug 19, 2004 8:40 pm

charley was a very small near cat 5, but if you want to see a really small cat 5, look at this image of tracy

http://www.ntlib.nt.gov.au/tracy/advanced/Met/24am.html
http://www.ntlib.nt.gov.au/tracy/advanced/Met/25am.html


damage form this to darwin was about 5 times worse than charley's
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#15 Postby HurricaneBill » Fri Aug 20, 2004 12:16 am

Derek Ortt wrote:charley was a very small near cat 5, but if you want to see a really small cat 5, look at this image of tracy

http://www.ntlib.nt.gov.au/tracy/advanced/Met/24am.html
http://www.ntlib.nt.gov.au/tracy/advanced/Met/25am.html


damage form this to darwin was about 5 times worse than charley's


Was Cyclone Tracy a Category 5? I thought I read somewhere it was, but I wasn't sure. I read in some book, the barometric pressure was 27.00 inches at landfall. Is this true?
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