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re: Hurricane Season - Unnamed Gulf Low Moving Inland - CSU Less Active Than Normal Season

Posted on 4/13/23 at 12:12 pm to
Posted by tarzana
TX Hwy 6--Brazos River Backwater
Member since Sep 2015
26528 posts
Posted on 4/13/23 at 12:12 pm to
This just in from USA Today, today:

South Florida was under siege and under water Thursday amid a storm that dumped 25 inches of rain over some coastal areas, flooding homes and highways and forcing the shutdown of a major airport.

Fort Lauderdale was slammed with 25.95 inches of rainfall in 24 hours, AccuWeather reported. Some areas received 20 inches of rain in six hours. Hollywood and South Miami received at least 9 inches of rain.

"The amount of rain, the rainfall rate is something you should see once in in every 1,000 years or once in every 2,000 years," Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather's director of forecast operations, told USA TODAY.

A flood watch was in effect across much of South Florida through Thursday night, the National Weather Service said.


And April is characteristically the "dry" season in South Florida. There seems to be no place to hide nowadays from adverse weather events.
Posted by Zephyrius
Wharton, La.
Member since Dec 2004
8016 posts
Posted on 4/13/23 at 1:26 pm to
quote:

"The amount of rain, the rainfall rate is something you should see once in in every 1,000 years or once in every 2,000 years,"

Kiss your X flood rating goodbye!
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
120796 posts
Posted on 4/13/23 at 1:28 pm to
quote:

The amount of rain, the rainfall rate is something you should see once in in every 1,000 years or once in every 2,000 years," Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather's director of forecast operations, told USA TODAY.


Please show me detailed data on rainfall in the year 500 AD Dan
Posted by lz2112
Largo, Fl
Member since Oct 2019
1172 posts
Posted on 4/13/23 at 5:27 pm to
quote:

"The amount of rain, the rainfall rate is something you should see once in in every 1,000 years or once in every 2,000 years," Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather's director of forecast operations, told USA TODAY.


Thank God he's not an alarmist.

No wonder Bastardi left them.

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