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NorthHillsWx

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Everything posted by NorthHillsWx

  1. For all those talking about lack of good looking eyes every season: Are you not entertained???
  2. Proud to say that I’m not a snob for sexy Hurricanes, like Ida, and love a big ole fat truck tire like Larry. Last ERC gave us the biggest eye in the Atlantic in recent memory! Storm is a beast, also ACE is going to be through the roof with this one
  3. This is one I’d love to see a radar image of. Wilma south Florida-like
  4. About to have a truck tire eye structure.
  5. Larry’s taking off this evening. Nice blowup of convection in the inner core and a warming eye. Outflow is incredible in all sectors. It looks to me like some mid level dry sir has been hampering the eyewall from closing off and this convection will likely do the trick in mixing that out. This storm will be a beast over the next couple of days, will be fun to watch evolve
  6. 79.2 at the moment! Loving this early taste of fall. Low of 56.4 this morning. Hope everyone enjoyed what rain we could muster the other day, looks extremely dry the next two weeks, after being extremely dry the last 2 weeks
  7. Total costs of this storm are going to be absurd. It’s kind of that hurricane that had it all: catastrophic wind and surge at landfall, damaging winds in a major metropolitan area, and now widespread historic flooding in the most densely populated part of the country. Also, a fairly significant tornado outbreak from Virginia to the northeast
  8. 12/5/2 (about to be 3). Puts us at about the exact average for the entire season and it’s only first week in September
  9. Finished with 0.28” of rainfall yesterday
  10. Fits the term “catastrophic” for me. What’s crazy is surge looked to be very high and caused a large portion of the damage, but wind damage looks just as severe with many homes having their entire second stories shredded away and even apparent well-built homes having major damage as well. This was one of the most high-end wind impacts in history for the US. Just a historic storm all around
  11. 0.09” for the day, currently 82.2. High earlier was 86.7
  12. 4.16” MYD Highest Temp 99.4 Lowest Temp 60.3
  13. Larry looks primed this morning. This will be a fun one to watch for a long time. NHC disco this morning really gives this the impression we will be watching a sprawling major hurricane for some time
  14. GFS op has another cat 3/4 headed for Louisiana…
  15. One thing I’ll say- though that’s a lot of damage in Grande Isle, that’s not nearly the surge damage I had expected for being in that location. Some houses clearly did get washed away, but not nearly what you’d expect from a 15 foot (predicted) surge. Good news on that front. Still the town looks like a complete mess and I’m sure every property has moderate to severe damage.
  16. Original post likely targeted at New Orleans proper. Outside of New Orleans, a lot of towns are unrecognizable today. Good fortune was that the storm took about the best path to minimize the amount of population the destructive (and from what I’ve seen destructive undersells those winds) core passed over.
  17. Agreed. No clue how that happened. It became unreadable last night. As for flooding threats, some areas in Mississippi and Alabama are under the fire hose this morning
  18. I know impacts are still ongoing, but here are the highlights of this storm so far: 1) incredible model consistency on rapid strengthening prior to landfall, verified 2) the rate of strengthening in last 12 hours prior to landfall 3) durability of the circulation while technically inland (marsh). I know there’s a lot of water in SE LA but we’ve seen major hurricanes weaken faster in the ocean with actual heat content. I think the storm was able to generate so much energy and under pristine environmental conditions it allowed it to remain at its peak for hours after its first landfall and this was in no small part due to it rapidly strengthening immediately up to landfall. We’ve seen it with some other storms, but this was impressive 4) actually getting what appears to be a verifiable reading of a high end hurricane matching its estimated wind speed at landfall. Getting a reading of 149 mph sustained wind is absurd 5) numerous gusts over 100 kts inland. It seems with so many majors we have to search just to find a single reading or two over 100 kts. Even in a remote and swampy area, this storm dished out dozens, and some well inland Ida may not have been Katrina (fingers still crossed) from the death and destruction standpoint but this will go down as one of the greats. It certainly from a wind perspective will end up towards the top of the list and I’m sure as the day goes on some of the images of structural damage from the ground zero areas near the coast are going to be sickening. An incredible storm and a absolute textbook example of what can happen in the GOM with the correct conditions. A+ forecasts from the NHC and many on this board. This will be one we remember Edit: had to add 1 more: 6) watching an ERC with a high end major hurricane begin to occur from a freaking continental US radar! You kidding me?! That was wild yesterday watching the powerful inner eyewall pinballing around in the formative outer eyewall! Can’t ever remember that happening with such a powerful well formed storm (maybe Matthew) especially at the beginning of an erc
  19. Still sitting at 4.16” for the month. No rain in last week +. Looking like we’ll snap our streak of 6”+ monthly rainfall totals imby
  20. Idas radar and satellite presentation are just disgustingly pretty for a high end hurricane over an hour after landfall. No degradation yet. Still lots of lightning in the eyewall too
  21. Mercifully it looks like Ida has leveled off. Unfortunately, it happened too late to keep this from being a catastrophic event where the storm comes ashore. Good news- the westward ticks this morning will keep the most dangerous impacts west of the city proper. I still expect gusts over 100 across the city, but the destructive core looks to just miss at this point
  22. The deepening depicted on these models in the 12 hours before landfall is absolutely astonishing
  23. I completely disagree. This storm has had little lead time. Also, due to covid, finding places to evacuate to or convincing people to leave will be that much more challenging than normal. TS force winds sill arrive by Sunday morning, giving the rest of today and tomorrow all they have to evacuate. This is going to be a powerful, scary storm and leaving this one to chance is not wise. Very happy to see the evacuations popping up today.
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