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re: Storm Update:- Ida Moves Away - The Cleanup Begins...

Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:10 am to
Posted by UncleLester
West of the Mississippi
Member since Aug 2008
9450 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:10 am to
*GOOGLES* Pecan Island

Never knew that was a place until now. I must have missed that day of Louisiana History class.
Posted by H2O Tiger
Delta Sky Club
Member since May 2021
7954 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:11 am to
You never watched Swamp People, that's where Liz is from
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
105274 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:11 am to
quote:

DISCUSSION AND OUTLOOK
----------------------
At 400 AM CDT (0900 UTC), the center of Hurricane Ida was located
near latitude 24.0 North, longitude 85.2 West. Ida is moving toward
the northwest near 16 mph (26 km/h) and this general motion should
continue through late Sunday or early Monday. A slower northward
motion is forecast on Monday. On the forecast track, the center of
Ida will move over the southeastern Gulf of Mexico today and over
the north central Gulf of Mexico on Sunday. Ida is then expected
to make landfall along the U.S. northern Gulf coast within the
hurricane warning area by late Sunday or early Monday, then move
through portions of Louisiana or western Mississippi later on
Monday.

Maximum sustained winds are near 80 mph (130 km/h) with higher
gusts. Rapid strengthening is forecast during the next 24 to 36
hours and Ida is expected to be an extremely dangerous major
hurricane when it approaches the northern Gulf coast on Sunday.
Weakening is expected after Ida makes landfall.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 25 miles (35 km) from the
center and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 115 miles
(185 km).

The estimated minimum central pressure is 987 mb (29.15 inches).

Posted by Bayou_Tiger_225
Third Earth
Member since Mar 2016
12816 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:12 am to
quote:

GOOGLES* Pecan Island

Or as Duck hunters know it, God's Country.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
105274 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:14 am to
quote:


Just after the last advisory, the convective structure of Ida got a
bit ragged, probably due to the residual effects of land
interaction with Cuba and a tongue of dry air that wrapped into the
eastern side of the circulation. However, latest radar images from
Cuba show that the eye is becoming better defined, and satellite
imagery shows cooling of the cloud tops in the eyewall. The
initial intensity has been held at 70 kt based on the latest trends
and earlier Hurricane Hunter aircraft data. NOAA and Air Force
reserve Hurricane Hunter aircraft are scheduled to investigate Ida
again starting around 12Z.

The initial motion remains northwestward or 315/14. A subtropical
ridge centered off the southeast U.S. coast is expected to shift
westward through the weekend, and this feature should continue to
provide a steering flow that will take Ida steadily northwestward
across the Gulf of Mexico during the next 36-48 h. The track
guidance remains in good agreement that Ida will make landfall on
the coast of southeastern or central Louisiana late Sunday or early
Monday morning. After landfall, Ida is expected to turn northward
through Louisiana and western Mississippi at a slower forward speed
as it moves around the western end of the ridge. Recurvature into
the westerlies and an east-northeastward motion are expected by the
end of the forecast period. The new forecast track is nudged
slightly to the west after 36 h to keep it near the various
consensus models, but this is not a significant change from the
previous forecast. Users are again reminded to not focus on the
exact details of the track forecast as storm surge, wind, and
rainfall impacts will extend far from the center.

Ida is expected to remain in a favorable environment of light
vertical shear and very warm sea-surface temperatures until it
makes landfall. The only negative factor is the possibility that
dry air may try to entrain into the system and slow the expected
intensification. The SHIPS and LGEM models are showing a little
less strengthening than previously. However, the HWRF and HMON
models continue to forecast Ida to reach Category 4 intensity
before landfall. The new intensity forecast will forecast a peak
intensity of 120 kt in best agreement with the HWRF and HMON, and
the pre-landfall part of the forecast is little changed from the
previous forecast. After landfall, rapid weakening is expected due
to land interaction, drier air, and an increase in shear, and Ida
is expected to become a post-tropical cyclone as it moves through
the Tennessee Valley.

As Ida continues to intensify over the Gulf of Mexico, an expansion
of its wind field is predicted. The NHC wind radii forecast is
largely based on the radii consensus, and winds of at least tropical
storm force are likely to reach the coast Sunday morning. Therefore,
all preparations to protect life and property for this dangerous
event need to be made today.


Key Messages:

1. Hurricane and tropical storm conditions are ending over Cuba.
However, Ida will continue to bring periods of heavy rain across
western Cuba through today that may lead to flash flooding and
mudslides.

2. There is a danger of life-threatening storm surge inundation
Sunday along the coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi within the
Storm Surge Warning area. Extremely life-threatening inundation of
10 to 15 feet above ground level is possible within the area from
Morgan City, Louisiana, to the Mouth of the Mississippi River.
Interests throughout the warning area should follow any advice given
by local officials.

3. Ida is expected to be an extremely dangerous major hurricane when
it reaches the coast of Louisiana. Hurricane-force winds are
expected Sunday in portions of the Hurricane Warning area along the
Louisiana coast, including metropolitan New Orleans, with
potentially catastrophic wind damage possible where the core of Ida
moves onshore. Actions to protect life and property should be rushed
to completion in the warning area.

4. Ida is likely to produce heavy rainfall later Sunday into Monday
across the central Gulf Coast from southeast Louisiana to coastal
Mississippi resulting in significant flash and riverine flooding
impacts. As Ida moves inland, flooding impacts are possible across
portions of the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 28/0900Z 24.0N 85.2W 70 KT 80 MPH
12H 28/1800Z 25.4N 86.9W 85 KT 100 MPH
24H 29/0600Z 27.1N 88.9W 105 KT 120 MPH
36H 29/1800Z 28.6N 90.5W 120 KT 140 MPH
48H 30/0600Z 30.1N 91.3W 85 KT 100 MPH...INLAND
60H 30/1800Z 31.6N 91.2W 45 KT 50 MPH...INLAND
72H 31/0600Z 33.2N 90.5W 30 KT 35 MPH...INLAND
96H 01/0600Z 36.0N 87.0W 25 KT 30 MPH...INLAND
120H 02/0600Z 37.5N 82.5W 20 KT 25 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW

$$
Forecaster Beven

Posted by Lord_Ford
Louisiana
Member since Jun 2016
4240 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:17 am to
Any fellow Ascension/ Baton Rouge stayers getting second thoughts? Lol
Posted by Bayou_Tiger_225
Third Earth
Member since Mar 2016
12816 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:18 am to
Thanks Jim for pulling those.

I hope those who were waiting one more morning to make their decision see the updated track when they wake up and make the safe decision for them and their family.
Posted by longhorn22
Nicholls St. Fan
Member since Jan 2007
43193 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:19 am to
frick this kid with blue lights following me… every move I make on 49 he follows… thinking of dropping speed or exit. Hate those fricking lights
Posted by H2O Tiger
Delta Sky Club
Member since May 2021
7954 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:21 am to
HIDs in non-HID housings suck
Posted by Bayou_Tiger_225
Third Earth
Member since Mar 2016
12816 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:21 am to
quote:

Any fellow Ascension/ Baton Rouge stayers getting second thoughts?
No, but I'm happy we started making preparations when we did. If you were waiting until today to prepare because you thought their might be a decent path change you will stuggle to find what you need. It was slim pickings yesterday evening.

Going back to sleep now. See y'all for the 10am update
This post was edited on 8/28/21 at 4:24 am
Posted by UncleLester
West of the Mississippi
Member since Aug 2008
9450 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:24 am to
Anyone want me to submit a question on the Weather Channel Facebook page? It might be selected to be answered at :50 past the hour.

Posted by longhorn22
Nicholls St. Fan
Member since Jan 2007
43193 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:25 am to
I’m pulling away… but seems like he guns it and goes 100+ to try to get back near.. lol

Cruise between 82-85, easy stretch of 75 north of Alexandria
Posted by H2O Tiger
Delta Sky Club
Member since May 2021
7954 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:27 am to
Watch out for Sheriffs in DeSoto, cars are dark green and blend in with the median
Posted by otowntiger
O-Town
Member since Jan 2004
16919 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:27 am to
quote:

Dsngumbo
Shifted a little to the west, putting Baton Rouge back into the northeast quadrant. They also now predict it will be a category 2 hurricane when it’s over southern Iberville Parish with sustained wind of 100mph.

This hurricane is going to frick shite UP.
one thing to note in the latest NHC discussion is that the max intensity forecast might be ticking down as a couple of the models are backing off a bit. The other thing to note is they have mentioned the last couple of advisories is that they expect rapid weakening right after landfall- normally land interaction alone causes this I know but they’ve added that dry air and wind shear will aid in knocking it way down as it moves inland. They show it going from 140 down to 100 right after landfall and it is barely a TS by the time it moves into MS. This likely won’t be like Laura and remain a hurricane for 100’s of miles inland. There will obviously be plenty of wind and tons of rain, not to mention potentially devastating storm surge, but I’m now thinking that the wind in places like BR won’t be worse than Gustav, maybe even less- it could last longer with this storm though- just won’t be catastrophic wind wise it looks like to me for locations further inland. Houma and MC may be a different story though.
This post was edited on 8/28/21 at 4:38 am
Posted by AndyCBR
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Nov 2012
8207 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:29 am to
quote:

If the EURO verifies...


Most important text in this post.

Pretty far out but we'll know a lot more in 24 hours.
Posted by rocket31
Member since Jan 2008
41887 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:32 am to
it's not that far out actually but okay
Posted by TitleistProV1X
Member since Nov 2015
3649 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:33 am to
The model has been very steady. Seems like you can bank on almost a direct hit for Baton Rouge give or take 15 miles.
Posted by GREENHEAD22
Member since Nov 2009
20843 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:34 am to
Would one be better in Laff or Covington for this bitch?
Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
178854 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:36 am to
quote:

Would one be better in Laff or Covington for this bitch?


Lafayette but not sure it’s worth switching over other side of storm
Posted by ned nederlander
Member since Dec 2012
5892 posts
Posted on 8/28/21 at 4:40 am to
If the storm really does come in around Houma/MC you really have to be impressed with the modeling for this storm. This track has been locked in really before we even had a storm.

Good luck, everybody.
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