Here are the current ones:
64 KT....... 40NE 15SE 0SW 20NW.
50 KT....... 75NE 30SE 20SW 30NW.
34 KT.......120NE 90SE 75SW 75NW.
Dennis is not that big a hurricane; the storm has near Cat. 3 winds, but hurricane force winds only extend 40nm in the strongest quadrant of the storm. (Of course, strength doesn't always dictate the span of 64kt winds, etc., etc...) TS winds are found 120nm from the center, a fairly decent distance, but on the current forecast track (we'll see just where the forecast rests sooner or later), all of the Florida peninsula would be spared the stronger portion of Dennis. Of course, a eastward deviation could put the Keys under the gun; thus the Hurricane Watch. Dennis will probably remain a tightly organized hurricane, most definitely in the Caribbean, and these wind fields will likely continue.
The 36 hr. forecasted wind fields (while over Cuba):
64 KT... 40NE 30SE 15SW 25NW.
50 KT... 75NE 50SE 40SW 60NW.
34 KT...140NE 120SE 90SW 120NW.
...not much change...hope this stays at a safe distance, like a good few miles southwest of Key West.





