Tornadocane
Member
I dunno Laura still wins to me ?
Much respect to Laura, but this storm, by some meteorological phenomenon, is now flirting with Major status despite NHC and others forecasting it to weaken. This is catching a lot of people in dense towns and suburbs off-guard cause of the intense rainfall, and these stronger winds are going to knock down trees that have been loosened from the 15-20 inches of rain that has already fallen. People saw Laura coming. The people in the sparsely populated areas of Western LA were very aware of the storm-prone area and evacuated. Who in MI and FL living 3-15 miles inland left their houses for a forecast of 10-25 inches of rain? Nobody. And those totals are likely gonna be doubled. We'll see what else is in store tonight, but I'm legitimately afraid that people are going to be trapped in their house or on their roofs.
118 MPH flight level winds.
Sally (2020) - HDOB - Atlantic AF Miss. 12 - Ob. 54 - Tropical Atlantic
View decoded HDOB observation 54 available for Sally in 2020 from Air Force mission 12 in the North Atlantic basin.
tropicalatlantic.com