Reader
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2004
- Messages
- 7,033
- Reaction score
- 110
http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=2429
Dr. Masters' blog on Andrea.....partial quote:
I'm in the Big Bend just south of Tallahassee. We had a hard rain last night but just off and on today and a little wind. I think we will just catch the outer bands of Andrea...no tornado watch here. Here is the radar for the area, think it auto updates:
http://www.wunderground.com/radar/r...930031&lon=-84.25710297&label=Tallahassee, FL
Dr. Masters' blog on Andrea.....partial quote:
However, given the continued presence of dry air and increasing wind shear, and little time before landfall, it will be difficult for Andrea to reach hurricane strength before landfall occurs early this evening--though I won't rule out intensification to a 70 mph tropical storm. Heavy rains of 3 - 6" that have the potential to cause flash flooding will be the storm's main threat. Carrabelle, near Apalachicola, reported 4.5" of rain in a 5-hour period ending at 8 am EDT. Tornadoes in some of the heavier thunderstorms in Andrea's spiral bands are also a concern, and the storm had already spawned five tornadoes as of 9 am EDT. Bands of heavy thunderstorms with embedded rotating thunderstorms capable of generating tornadoes where over both the west and east coasts of Florida between 6 am - 8am, triggering tornado warnings in the counties near Fort Lauderdale and Tampa Bay. A tornado hit The Acreage in Palm Beach County at 6:45 am EDT, injuring one person, damaging homes, and downing trees and power lines. Two other tornadoes were reported on Florida's east coast, one in Broward County, and one in Palm Beach County. Andrea also spawned two tornadoes southeast of Tampa Bay between 2:30 am and 4 am EDT Thursday, but damage was minor. Most of South and Central Florida are under a tornado watch today. A storm surge of 2 - 5 feet is predicted for Tampa Bay northward to Apalachicola, and rip currents will be a risk for swimmers who brave the high surf. As of 9 am EDT Thursday, our wundermap with the storm surge layer turned on was showing storm surge levels just over 1 foot near Tampa and Apalachicola on Florida's Gulf Coast.
I'm in the Big Bend just south of Tallahassee. We had a hard rain last night but just off and on today and a little wind. I think we will just catch the outer bands of Andrea...no tornado watch here. Here is the radar for the area, think it auto updates:
http://www.wunderground.com/radar/r...930031&lon=-84.25710297&label=Tallahassee, FL