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- Jan 1, 2017
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That's the hope.It's weakening and will turn north before it hits the US.
Me too. I'm in Wilmington NC and have been in 10 of these since 1995. I'm over it!I really hope that it’s a miss. One of the spaghetti lines has it landing near me.
Me too! I'm still suffering from PTSD from Hurricane Irene and Sandy as well as Tropical Storm Lee (the one in 2011).I really hope that it’s a miss.
I prefer the horse's mouthBest consolidation of tropical event reporting. There's a lot of information here: http://bearpawsweather.com/
They both have information the other does not. Bear Paws, as a consolidator, has some interesting things, like the 'monte carlo' track simulations it gets from tropicaltidbits.com.I prefer the horse's mouth
National Hurricane Center
www.nhc.noaa.gov
Note the disclaimer in the upper right ... "do not use this map to make decisions! seek official info ..."They both have information the other does not. Bear Paws, as a consolidator, has some interesting things, like the 'monte carlo' track simulations it gets from tropicaltidbits.com.
Which would be the prudent thing for anybody consolidating information from varied sources to put on their charts.Note the disclaimer in the upper right ... "do not use this map to make decisions! seek official info ..."
I grew up in SoCal with earthquakes and moved to NC for hurricanes! I'll never ever seek out tornadoes though (although we do have some when hurricanes come ashore).Stuff like this would make me crazy (er) and watching and wondering!! Never lived in a place with this kind of weather. Of course, I also know people who've never been in an earthquake. I grew up with those, some REALLY big ones, but I'm better suited to that. You don't really know it's coming, just suddenly the earth around you goes crazy and then it's all over but the aftershocks. Which can be bad, too. Stay safe, my friends!!