
Normandy Ho
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Everything posted by Normandy Ho
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I digress as this is a beryl discussion and perhaps a separate thread can be made for building code construction, but cost of living in California isn’t actually related to our building codes being stringent. It does impact cost of construction, but land values are high because of the weather in Cali (and proximity to all types of natural forms entertainment like beach, snow, mountains, etc.
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Well the why we are in this situation is complicated and is more to do with how we are set up as a society. But at a holistic level poorer countries having better building construction in vulnerable areas than a world “superpower” is unacceptable. And this low frequency of wind events I don’t buy as a reason / justification. Hurricanes have demolished communities for decades upon decades and this country refuses to change building codes to match the situation. Same shit with tornado alley. The only place we have even remotely modified building codes to mitigate disaster is in seismic zones. After north ridge and and the Frisco quake of 1989 Cali codes were incredibly revamped, and nobody complained about costs because it had to be done to protect the life and safety of the people living in these buildings. This even caused mass retrofitting of existing buildings to make them safer (and again nobody complained about costs, and if they did I’d didn’t matter because it became the law) That level of detail and action does not occur in hurricane prone zones, even in Florida.
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To add more to the construction/ damage convo (which interests me since I’m an architect and love seeing how our structures perform against the big bad wolves). I cannot imagine how terrifying it must have been for people In These houses….hiding in a corner under a mattress while the wind just plows through the inside of your house, sucking out all things from inside since the roof is gone. scary scary shit. the fact that there are not hundreds of people dead is a damn testament to these islands and how they build. The United States of improper building codes should fucking take notice. Make all gulf coast states design to the same code as California seismic code (which is equivalent to designing for a cat 5 more or less without getting too much into the weeds). Just watch when one of these monsters comes ashore in the US, going to be really ugly.
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2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Normandy Ho replied to Stormchaserchuck1's topic in Tropical Headquarters
I still think we get 2-4 NS in July. I dont think there is going to be an unfavorable period in this season, just varying degrees of favorability. If we are getting a cat 5 damn near in June this season is trying to tell us something (nevermind the cat five developed under less than ideal conditions to begin with) -
Watch the area around the coast of the southern DR / Haiti this morning. This is where the shear zone / TUTT is currently. The circulation of beryl is going to start interacting with this feature, and I’m guessing intense outer bands fire off on the NW quad. The interaction between giants will be interesting, and im not sold on the TUTT shredding this. Beryl is a really strong feature (not just at lower levels, it has a vicious anticyclone with great poleward outflow)
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The odd structural issues in the east side are because the hurricane is embedded within a strong easterly flow at both low levels and mid levels. This is the graveyard that typically kills most smaller circulations. Beryl is able to keep this flow at bay, however it causes some ugliness on satellite
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Yep changing my tune in this one. One thing I notice different than beryl is this is Already further north and closer to SAL. Not gonna be a beryl repeat.
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The lightning in the core, insane cloud motions in the eye, and general overall IMPRESSIVE vorticity signature pulling in inflow from hundreds of miles away suggest this is very likely on the cusp of cat 5 intensity. Any intense convective bursts bring it near or at that level. As has been said by others, impressive doesn’t even begin to describe it. I’m still having a hard time believing it’s happening like THIS this early. Wild.
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While beryl is getting the attention and rightfully so, this will also stun people with how intense it gets. Early call is a similar but less intense solution that’s is occurring with beryl, track a bit further north. Major hurricane strike risk for the Antilles is high again with this one (which is just hilarious that I’m saying this and not trolling). Crazy ass season
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Thinking has changed. Given beryl is beginning a RIC and still has more than 24 hours until first landfall, I’m now fairly certain that the islands will face a record breaking June hurricane. Cannot rule out a push for cat five unfortunately. Conditions are favorable and this is a nasty vortex. You can tell how strong it is by the amount of western inflow it is pulling in ahead of it. Trades have been completely stopped ahead of the storm.
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Excellent spiral banding out west ahead of the storm. Excellent inflow on the southern side as well. Great outflow expanding westward. Only hindering issue is some easterly shear. Thinking remains the same, however Intensity I am increasing to 135 mph+ at first impact. Beryl will be gone after this year