My cousin posted this today in Facebook. Bet she hasn't considered lugging groceries up 17 flights of stairs if the elevators arent working due to no power. She is going to regret the decision to not hop on a flight out.
I won't be surpised if it's already at low to mid-end Cat 3. That storm is taking off.Yeah
Yeah
Can we keep the global warming talk in the global warming subforum..It’s taken a while to understand and for many they don’t wanna believe it but global warming has caused ocean temps to run much warmer than normal and the waters in the gulf are no different.. the waters everywhere now can support and sustain major hurricane all the way to the coast lines … it used to be only certain areas would have those type of temps but now that expands and warms so the warm spots are warmer giving bigger booms to storms now and the cooler spots now are warm and can sustain those strong storms … IMO of course this is what I think is happening
Yeah, my 115mph "underperformer" wag at landfall isn't looking too good right about now.Yeah... I see why they sent emergency recon because yikes
Funny. That guy could almost be me.Ida is looking to take a track very close to that of Betsy of 1965 just SW and W of New Orleans at possibly a similar strength. My friend who grew up there and experienced it in his house as a kid was just telling me about it. They had no flooding, but the winds were blowing all night and it was pretty terrifying. Fortunately, their house was left intact though they did lose their fence, which itself caused the loudest noise of the night. A night he’ll never forget. It was because of storms like this that he and his wife moved to Atlanta as a young adult. He doesn’t miss NO at all and will never move back there or anywhere near the Gulf or Atlantic coast. At most, he takes occasional trips there.
This could be seen as a very scary looking face if you take into account the second area of convection to the west of idaHere’s another two hour update.. first image is 2 hours ago second is current.. View attachment 89603
View attachment 89604
Eye is really clearing out signaling convection warming the core, might have a 3 View attachment 89606
I'm betting this makes landfall as a low-end Cat 4. I was skeptical because of yesterday but seeing this boom, I don't see it being stopped from being a Cat 4.
Could still.throw In an EWRC that could end intensification.
Looks like another area of disturbed weather may develop later this week in the same portion of the Caribbean where Ida developed late last week. Genesis also looks similar to Ida w/ monsoon trough, tropical wave, upper low over the Bahamas, and Kelvin Wave all interacting to potentially yield development in the western Caribbean. Environment is there as is some model support. Not quite as confident (yet) in this one as I was w/ pre-Ida, but it's going to have much better timing w/ the Kelvin Wave (most TCs form about 2 days after passage). Here's a mini-thread I made on it. Hopefully, this one stays down near Central America...
Probably not gonna have enough time.
I'm going 952 Mbs on first pass. She's frigg'n gorgeous right now.
Did someone say Betsy? Not quite, but it's getting there.
View attachment 89605
955mb 120mph if I had to take a stab at current intensity, we will find out shortly.
As I recall, one of the reasons Betsy had such an impact to its northeast was as a mature storm it had an unusually large eye for a landfalling cat 3/4. I've never looked up its IKE, but that would be interesting if it exist.I was just looking up Betsy's stats and it landfalled over the LA swamps with 140 mph highest sustained winds and 942 mb pressure, both the strongest of its entire existence in solid cat 4 territory. Hopefully, Ida won't be quite as strong at landfall since the 0Z GFS shows 956 and the NHC has 130 with a hopeful slight weakening just before landfall, but those higher Betsy numbers are not unreachable unfortunately on the high end of potential. As it is, 956 would be bad enough with that being a solid cat 3 and bringing the N.O. area about the worst of the storm in regards to winds, surge, and very heavy rainfall.