Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Hurricane Omar


The multiple areas of weather activity have condensed into two named events-- Tropical Depression #16 is over Mexico and Hurricane Omar is tracking northeast into the Atlantic. Stay tuned for details.

Monday, October 13, 2008

New Tropical Activity

After weeks of quiet, the oceans have stirred up again!

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Hurricane Ike may go down the pike

As of 8 AM today, it looks like Hurricane Ike might spare south Florida... even from tropical force winds. Bad news for Cuba, though, as this Category 4 storm with 135 MPH winds is scheduled to roll through the center of the island on it's way to the Gulf.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Ike predicted to go further south

Even if Hurricane Ike doesn't hit us directly with his 135 MPH winds, the hurricane winds extend 45 miles, and tropical force winds 140 miles from the center. The good news for us is that with each advisory, the predicted path is further and further to our south.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Flooded today, Ike on the way?


The heavy rain started in the middle of the night and continued through 10 AM as Tropical Storm Hanna passed 200 miles offshore on her journey north. Flooding was a problem this morning on roads and in parking lots, but the rain is tapering off now and the water will recede.


Meanwhile, Hurricane Ike is weakening and tracking further south. We're not sure what this means for us, but South Floridians are starting to prepare just in case.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Stronger Ike Still Headed our Way




Hurricane Ike is still strong and now aiming even more towards us.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Hurricane Ike, Cat 4, headed our way??



Hurricane Ike is a Category 4 storm with 135 MPH sustained winds and higher gusts. The five-day cone puts South Florida in its path!



Meanwhile, Hanna is steering clear of us and is heading north in the Atlantic.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Four Storms at Once




There are an amazing four active storms in the Atlantic. Our immediate concern is Tropical Storm Hanna.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Storms Everywhere!

Gustav made landfall, Hanna is now a hurricane with 75 MPH winds and maybe going north (or maybe not). Tropical Depression #9 just formed in the Atlantic and is presently aiming at South Florida. More storms are following!

Cat 3 Gustav Makes Landfall, Tropical Storm Hanna Heads North?



Gustav is making landfall right now as a Category 3 Storm in Louisiana! Sustained winds are 115 MPH. Reportedly, over 2 million people evacuated ahead of the storm.



Hanna continues to make twists and turns. She's still a tropical storm with 50 MPH winds, and may or may not hit us.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Hanna Headed for South Florida, Cat 4 Gustav Aims Fury at Louisiana



Tropical Storm Hanna tumbles slowly through the Atlantic. The latest forecast track brings her to South Florida at the end of next week.



Hurricane Gustav has intensified from a Category 2 (110 MPH sustained winds) to a Category 4 (150 MPH sustained winds) in just 12 hours. Hurricane warnings are up for Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. They are evacuating!!

Friday, August 29, 2008

Hanna Stronger, Gustav off our radar



Tropical Storm Hanna is blowing at 50 MPH this morning and is predicted to make a strange loop to the south. We'll see. We're in the cone. Gustav is still headed to Louisiana. Just a tropical storm now, he's expected to become a hurricane again.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Tracking Tropical Storms Hanna & Gustav



Here comes Hanna with 40 MPH sustained winds.



Tropical Storm Gustav is showing signs of strengthening. His sustained winds are now 70 MPH.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Gustav Weakening, A new Depression Forming


Tropical Storm Gustav has weakened further. His winds are now blowing at 45 MPH. Meanwhile, a new storm is on the horizon. The red area to our southeast is expected to become a depression.


Gustav Weakening

Gustav's winds are down to 60 MPH and he's a tropical storm again.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Hurricane Gustav Heads West

5 PM - Gustav has slipped back to 75 MPH. The cone has lowered away from Florida. Still a hurricane.

11 AM - Gustav has strengthened to 90 MPH sustained winds... almost a category 2 hurricane. He's moving further away from South Florida, which is good... but still a possible threat. Stay tuned.

5 AM - It's now Hurricane Gustav with 85 MPH winds. The good news at the moment is that the estimated strike path has moved west and South Florida is out of the "cone." This doesn't mean we're in the clear... just in a better place.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Here comes Tropical Storm Gustav

5:45 PM - Just a depression three hours ago, Tropical Storm Gustav is now delivering 60 MPH sustained winds. An upgrade to hurricane is expected tomorrow. South Florida remains in the "cone of probability."

2 PM- This just in! A tropical depression has formed and is trekking up the same path as Tropical Storm Fay. At the moment, this depression is blowing with sustained winds of 35 miles an hour. Stengthening is expected and a name will likely be given in the next day or so. Stay tuned for updates.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Fay is STILL in Florida. More storms on the way?

Tropical Storm Fay is STILL moving through Florida on her zig zag path from bottom to top. It's as if every part of Florida has shared in her visit! While her winds once reached near hurricane strength at 65 miles an hour, she's now blowing at just 45 miles an hour. The good news is that she's brought much needed rain to our low water supply. Fay is expected to finish her tour through the panhandle within the next day or so. In the meanwhile, we have two new areas of potential storm potential to our south!

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Nothin' Doin' with Fay

Fay made second landfall around 5 AM near Ft. Myers. She remained a tropical storm. It was quiet here overnight. We awoke this morning to find some standing water, intermittent squalls and gray skies. The newspaper was delivered and we expect things to be back to normal tomorrow. In the meantime, tornado watches, flood watches and tropical storm warnings remain in effect.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Fay Makes Landfall

Tropical Storm Fay made landfall in Key West at 3 PM. She arrived with 60 MPH sustained winds, higher gusts and tornadoes. This infrared satellite image shows our current condition, around 4:40 PM.

Excerpts from the 5 PM Advisory:

FAY IS MOVING TOWARD THE NORTH-NORTHWEST NEAR 12 MPH... A TURN TOWARD THE NORTH WITH A SLOWER FORWARD SPEED IS EXPECTED TONIGHT... MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS ARE NEAR 60 MPH...WITH HIGHER GUSTS. STRENGTHENING IS EXPECTED TONIGHT AND TUESDAY... FAY IS FORECAST TO BE AT OR NEAR HURRICANE STRENGTH AS IT APPROACHES THE SOUTHWESTERN COAST OF FLORIDA.TROPICAL STORM FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 125 MILES.

Hurricane Fay on the Way

Broward County just announced shelter openings. Broward public schools will remain closed through Tuesday, 8/19. Here are excerpts from the 2 PM storm advisory:

MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS ARE NEAR 60 MPH...FAY IS FORECAST TO BECOME A HURRICANE AS IT NEARS THE SOUTHWESTERN FLORIDA COAST ON TUESDAY. TROPICAL STORM FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 115 MILES.

The Warnings are Up


Tropical Storm Warnings are up for South Florida, which means we will feel tropical force winds (39 to 73 mph sustained) within 24 hours. They say the weather will deterioritate this afternoon. It's already real gray out there. She's strengthening to become a hurricane.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Tropical Storm Watch

8:00 PM - Fay is predicted further west now. We are out of "the cone." But watches remain in effect and schools remain closed.

3:30 PM - Broward schools are closed Monday.


8:00 AM - Dade, Broward & Palm Beach is under a tropical storm watch. The storm's eye is not expected to go over us; however, "TROPICAL STORM FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUTWARD UP TO 105 MILES FROM THE CENTER" so we may feel something as it goes by.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Tropical Storm Fay on the Way?


Here she comes! Tropical Storm Fay. She may become a hurricane once she gets to Florida.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Will it Become a Storm?

These "formation potential" areas have formed and departed over the past few days. This is a new product of the National Hurricane Center. We've been riddled with "formation potential," this season, but few named storms so far. We're keeping an eye on these new red and yellow areas; they're close and they may turn into something.

Monday, August 11, 2008

A Hurricane Coming?

The map is littered with storm possibilities. The red area in the middle has the highest probability of organizing and is expected to become a tropical depression. It's moving northwest. In our direction.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Tropical Storm Edouard

Tropical Storm Edouard formed in the gulf LAST NIGHT and it's headed west to Texas! Wow, that's fast. Meanwhile, there's an area of low formation potential (yellow) to our southeast.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

New Wave to Watch

The Atlantic is rather quiet right now; but, we are watching a new wave of "medium storm potential" off the coast of Africa. It's moving west-northwest in our general direction.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Dolly Cat 2 Makes Landfall, Cristobal Gone

Hurricane Dolly made landfall in southern Texas as a Category 2 yesterday. It brought a lot of rain, but less flooding than expected. Cristobal drifted north along the coast without incident. A new area of low formation potential (in yellow) is out there.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Tropical Storms Dolly & Cristobal

There are two tropical storms, but neither is headed in our direction. Tropical Storm Cristobal is going north along the coast of North Carolina. Dolly is headed towards Texas. Betha seems to have moved away.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Bertha finally heading out

Bertha is still here (and a hurricane again), but predicted to head over to Europe soon. In the meanwhile, Tropical Depression #3 has formed off of South Carolina and is heading north. North Carolina is under a tropical storm warning. Also, there are two areas of potential storm development to our south. The red one is moving west northwest.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Bertha long lasting, More Potential Areas

Bertha is only a tropical storm, but she's the longest lasting July storm on record. She formed two weeks ago and continues on and on. Today's map shows us two "medium" probability areas for storm formation to our south. Yesterday's yellow area has dissapated.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Bertha and more!

Bertha hangs on, but what's this? New areas (orange, yellow and red) for potential development! These could become organized storms. Visit the National Hurricane Center for details.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Bertha hangs around, new storm brewing

First expected to miss the island, Hurricane Bertha soon drifted over Bermeuda with 70 MPH winds and rain. The storm continues to meander on, perhaps staying out to sea. Meanwhile, a new tropical disturbance has just been noted. The orange area off the coast of South America has "medium" formation potetional. Stay tuned for more.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Hurricane Bertha a Cat 2 out to sea

Hurricane Bertha is now a category 2 storm and moving further away from land. She might miss the US coast altogether.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Hurricane Bertha a Category 3

As of 4 AM Tuesday, Hurricane Bertha is a Category 3 hurricane. She's taking a sharp turn to the north and is expected to weaken to a tropical storm before approaching land.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Hurricane Bertha Heading North

At 4 PM, Bertha is a category 2 storm and will likely strengthen to a category 3 before weakening over water. The path continues north.

As of 4 AM Monday, Bertha is a category 1 hurricane. She's shifted to the north and we are out of the cone.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Introducing Tropical Storm Bertha

Tropical Storm Bertha was announced today. She's 2,800 miles south east of South Florida and heading west. She's expected to increase to hurricane strength in the next several days and turn to the north. Stay tuned.

Hurricane Wilma Video

Home Video of Hurricane Wilma 2005
first half of the storm