Hurricane Isaias - July 2020

Bryan Norcross
1h ·

MIDDAY TROPICAL STORM ISAIAS UPDATE: The tropical storm wobbled at just the right time. So good news for the Florida east coast, the strong part of the storm will apparently stay offshore. Watching for effects farther north from the Carolinas to the Northeast, however
 
Here in SWFL, south of Tampa we are getting the outer rain bands with sideways rain. Some wind, not much. A good soaking for our dry earth.

On the east coast, my oldest is in Vero Beach, they had some high wind and rain bands move thru overnight. Now the winds are picking up. My aunt is about 15 miles north in Sebastian and says the same thing.

We are very grateful it is staying offshore and hope those on the barrier islands stay put so they don’t drive & drown!
 
We are now on watch with sandbags ready for some first floor units in my condo complex at the Jersey Shore. I've taped my windows several times in the years I've owned here (Irene and Sandy). Seems to be potentially headed here though Cape May on Tuesday, 8/4.

Sandbags are great but the advice now is do NOT tape your windows. Putting tape on windows just means bigger shards of glass will be flying around if the windows break.
 
We are now on watch with sandbags ready for some first floor units in my condo complex at the Jersey Shore. I've taped my windows several times in the years I've owned here (Irene and Sandy). Seems to be potentially headed here though Cape May on Tuesday, 8/4.

We live on the bay and raised our home 15 feet after major flooding and damage after Sandy. Usually we board up our windows for major hurricanes such as Irene and Sandy but won’t this time. Our biggest concern is going to be flooding.
 
We live on the bay and raised our home 15 feet after major flooding and damage after Sandy. Usually we board up our windows for major hurricanes such as Irene and Sandy but won’t this time. Our biggest concern is going to be flooding.
I understand. Doubt I’ll tape any windows for this storm. Probably just bring the chairs inside. I’m only a block from the ocean, but at least not ground floor.
The streets / intersections were flooded enough during the heavy rain we just had on Friday.
 
Last Friday, my inland South Carolina county was predicted to get 12 inches of rain from Isaias. We need rain, but yikes. Today they're saying we'll get an inch; in fact, we only have an 80% chance of rain Monday.

We lived in Georgetown SC on the coast back in 1989 during Hurricane Hugo and I'm glad I don't have to worry about that type of chaos anymore (hopefully).
 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2020/08/03/isaias-path-carolinas-northeast/

After veering away from making a direct hit in Florida, Tropical Storm Isaias is now on a collision course with the Carolinas and then with the rest of the Eastern Seaboard all the way to Maine through midweek.

The storm is predicted to crash ashore on Monday night at hurricane intensity between Charleston, S.C., and Wilmington, N.C., causing widespread power outages, coastal inundation of three to five feet in some areas, and heavy rains that could reach eight inches or more in some locations.

The storm will then sweep into the Mid-Atlantic region on Tuesday, likely as a tropical storm, with storm surge flooding a threat in the Norfolk and Hampton Roads area, and a windswept soaking of three to six inches of rain on tap for the Washington, D.C., metro region.

The storm will then race into the Northeast, unleashing heavy rain, strong winds, and coastal flooding from New York to Maine.

Hurricane and tropical storm alerts plaster the Eastern Seaboard.

A hurricane warning covers the zone from roughly Charleston, S.C., to Wilmington, N.C. Tropical storm watches and warnings surround that region, stretching from the northeast Florida coast to Maine, including Savannah, Norfolk, the Chesapeake Bay area, D.C., Philadelphia, coastal New Jersey, New York City, Boston, and Portland, Me.

Areas at particular risk of storm surge flooding include Charleston and Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Wilmington, N.C., where the National Hurricane Center there is “danger of life-threatening” inundation along the coastline. A dangerous surge may also affect areas from the North Carolina Outer Banks to vulnerable areas in the Virginia Tidewater.

Peak wind gusts for coastal areas from central South Carolina to southern New England could reach 60 to 80 mph as Isaias makes its closest approach, with the highest values likely near the South Carolina-North Carolina border when the storm makes landfall. This is likely to cause downed trees and power outages, flying debris, and minor damage to some structures.
 
My daughter, SIL and grandson are using the beach house this week and next. DH and I live on the western side of NJ, near Philly. I was trying to get them to drive back here to our house because of the storm - winds, rain, flooding. Apparently, it now appear that it will be worse here where I am instead of along the coast where they are. Ah the irony of a tropical system. I swear these storms have minds of their own.
 
My daughter, SIL and grandson are using the beach house this week and next. DH and I live on the western side of NJ, near Philly. I was trying to get them to drive back here to our house because of the storm - winds, rain, flooding. Apparently, it now appear that it will be worse here where I am instead of along the coast where they are. Ah the irony of a tropical system. I swear these storms have minds of their own.

I live in Ocean County and work "up north". I already my boss I'm not coming in tomorrow. My commute is way too long to put up with wind and rain. Last Friday morning's commute was horrible and that was just a heavy rain downpour.
 
I live in Ocean County and work "up north". I already my boss I'm not coming in tomorrow. My commute is way too long to put up with wind and rain. Last Friday morning's commute was horrible and that was just a heavy rain downpour.
I don't blame you. Last Friday's rainstorm flooded the roads and intersections in my Cape May County town. This is bound to be worse. Stay safe...from viruses and tropical systems.
 
Well, worked last evening preparing for Hurricane. Now my area is under a Hurricane Warning. Yes, I said Hurricane Warning. The rest of the surrounding counties are under a Tropical Storm warning. Nerve racking for sure. Expecting Tropical Storm conditions to start late this afternoon. Storm is suppose to become a Hurricane at Landfall during a full moon and at high tide.
 
Well, worked last evening preparing for Hurricane. Now my area is under a Hurricane Warning. Yes, I said Hurricane Warning. The rest of the surrounding counties are under a Tropical Storm warning. Nerve racking for sure. Expecting Tropical Storm conditions to start late this afternoon. Storm is suppose to become a Hurricane at Landfall during a full moon and at high tide.
Stay safe, high and dry! My oldest used to work in VA on the Chesapeake Bay. Dang hurricanes shove water right up into the tributaries. People who shouldn’t even need to worry have to prep.
 
Well, worked last evening preparing for Hurricane. Now my area is under a Hurricane Warning. Yes, I said Hurricane Warning. The rest of the surrounding counties are under a Tropical Storm warning. Nerve racking for sure. Expecting Tropical Storm conditions to start late this afternoon. Storm is suppose to become a Hurricane at Landfall during a full moon and at high tide.

I hope you will be safe. Here in central NC we are having a thunderstorm with heavy rain at the moment. We are surrounded by trees so I always worry when there is a lot of rain and wind.
 
Yikes!

Isaias could bring strongest winds to New York City since Superstorm Sandy
Isaias could bring strongest winds to New York City since Superstorm Sandy

The winds didn’t ruin us in Sandy, it was the full moon, high tide, and storm surge from her slamming onshore as a “superstorm” she wasn’t even a Hurricane when she made landfall in NJ. Winds in NYC high rises need to be aware.

A gust during Sandy was clocked at 90 mph near me in Seaside Park. I have the paperwork that I needed for when we filed a claim.
 

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