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Tropical Ian Ianland Thread

It seems like your both set up in safe places and it's a bit too late to get on the road, I'd just ride it out. I've been to Disney during a tropical events and actually had one of my best days ever in the parks because people weren't back yet when they opened back up. I wouldn't plan on much in the way of flights until Friday most likely. You guys are in way better shape than many and all the hotels are probably full with people who evacuated from the coast. Orlando tends to hold up well.
Thanks Thor. I appreciate your reassurance. Although I already "knew" the answer, it's always hearing an objective point opinion. Families back home are obviously concerned, but they only watch the news and can get a tad overbearing on things they say from hundreds of miles away. If you're going to ride out a hurricane in Florida, I figure Disney is probably the best place to be in the entire state. Massive food and water supply. Power shouldn't be lost. Massive staff to assist with issues. On and on. I'm off property, so I'm solo, but at least her and her 8 year old daughter are at the safest place possible.
 
3K NAM does not agree with the 12K. LF in South Georgia. Split the difference and it's near Hilton Head which is where I expect and the NHC have currently. Still out of the Nam's range.
 
I really don't understand why people are buying mesoscale models against a currently high-end cat 4 hurricane. It's like using a wrench to hammer a nail into the wall. It might work but it won't do a good job. I'd stick to globals for now and only use the mesoscale for short-term features, not paths which vary from globals.
 
I really don't understand why people are buying mesoscale models against a currently high-end cat 4 hurricane. It's like using a wrench to hammer a nail into the wall. It might work but it won't do a good job. I'd stick to globals for now and only use the mesoscale for short-term features, not paths which vary from globals.
Except the UKMET has been in agreement the entire time
 
Ukie going way up the coast. Is this gonna end up being a bust for some of us?
 
I really don't understand why people are buying mesoscale models against a currently high-end cat 4 hurricane. It's like using a wrench to hammer a nail into the wall. It might work but it won't do a good job. I'd stick to globals for now and only use the mesoscale for short-term features, not paths which vary from globals.
I wouldn't trust a CAM right now but we just saw the globals error about 75-100 miles on their 60-72 hour forecast. That makes the difference between landfall near CHS or up near myrtle or never getting off shore of Fl
 
Ukie going way up the coast. Is this gonna end up being a bust for some of us?

Yeah I think so. If you're west of Raleigh I think the bust level is high. If you're expecting more rain than you typically get in a thunderstorm or two. Just my opinion. But yeah if this does take a hard left into the piedmont, more rain. But I think this thing just from climo stays closer to the coast.
 
Yeah I think so. If you're west of Raleigh I think the bust level is high. If you're expecting more rain than you typically get in a thunderstorm or two. Just my opinion. But yeah if this does take a hard left into the piedmont, more rain. But I think this thing just from climo stays closer to the coast.
The bust line is way west of rdu unless you are considering going from 6-8 to 2-4 a bust. Once this starts turning left and getting more extratropical there will be 2 corridors of heavy rain one along and left of the track and the second east and northeast on the east side of the mid level dry punch. This isn't going to be a late summer/ early September system where the heavy rain is more likely to stay pinned closer to the circulation
 
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