Watch for Hurrricane Sandy on East Coast

Reba

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Something to watch out for if you're in the tracking path:

Hurricane SANDY

No one hopes Hurricane Sandy lives up to its potential.

The storm that has already claimed nearly two dozen lives in the Caribbean churned Friday near the northern Bahamas, and meteorologists warn that it packs the potential to slam the Northeastern United States as soon as Monday with powerful winds and pelting rain.

Worst case, Sandy could merge with a strong cold front from the west. The double threat could morph into a "superstorm" that could sit over New England for days, making untold trouble for millions of residents. Weather experts said it's a recipe not unlike 1991's "Perfect Storm."

"Expect it to move very slowly," said James Franklin of the National Hurricane Center. "The large size of the system and its slow motion will mean a long-lasting event with two to three days of impacts."

At 2 p.m. ET Friday, forecasters said Sandy was about 430 miles south-southeast of Charleston, South Carolina, heading north at 7 mph. It was a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 75 mph. It's possible, the NHC says, that Sandy may weaken to a tropical storm in the next few hours. Nonetheless, experts said, it's not to be taken lightly.

"Forget about the category with this," said CNN meteorologist Rob Marciano. "When you have trees with leaves on them still, this kind of wind and rain on top of that, you're talking about trees that are going to come down, power lines are going to be out and the coastal flooding situation is going to be huge."

Sandy's death toll in Haiti, Jamaica and Cuba this week was 21 people.

The U.S. target area is hard to predict at this point. Some landfall computer models show the storm striking somewhere between the border separating North Carolina-Virginia north to Connecticut -- some of the most densely populated areas of the country. Maryland and Virginia have declared states of emergency.

In Virginia Beach, a campaign rally scheduled for Sunday for GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney was canceled due to Sandy. No word yet on other events later in the week. "We're keeping an eye on it," said a senior campaign adviser.

U.S. residents in Sandy's path, forecasters said, should prepare for the possibility of several days without power.

"There is potential for widespread power outages, not just for a couple of days but for a couple of weeks or more, if the storm stays on track," said meteorologist Kathy Orr of CNN affiliate KYW-TV in Philadelphia. The computer weather predictions are murky, but by Friday afternoon, it seemed unlikely that it would bring freezing rain or snow to the coast. Snow is possible in mountain areas, including the Appalachians.

Sandy could be a storm "of historic proportion," Orr warned, and the City of Brotherly Love could take a direct hit.

"This could be like the 'Perfect Storm' 21 years ago," said CNN meteorologist Chad Myers.


A combination of three weather systems produced the famed "Perfect Storm" in the north Atlantic over Halloween 1991, when moisture flung north by Hurricane Grace combined with a high pressure system and a cold front, according to the weather service.

The current weather conditions are not exactly the same as what produced the tempest. Although Grace contributed significantly to the storm, it did not progress to New England and did not make landfall, weather records show.

On Friday, residents in South Jersey were already stocking up on batteries and bottled water, and hardware stores have put up preparedness displays, KYW reported. One location quickly sold out of electric generators.

"This is the worst timing for a storm," Newark Mayor Cory Booker told CNN's Soledad O'Brien. "You have fall ending, a lot of loose branches.

"The storm itself will be bad, but I worry about the aftermath, people being caught without power."

Along the Jersey shore, storm preparations included bulldozers shoring up piers with mounds of sand. Worried residents filled sandbags in case of flooding.

"We will be piling up as much sand as possible along the beachfront," said Frank Ricciotti, Margate, New Jersey, public works director. "I think the water damage is worse than another type of damage, and the hardest thing is to stop water, once it starts coming up."

With a national election already under way in many early voting states, Sandy's wrath also could have a ripple effect on politics.

Bad weather in Maryland or Washington could make it harder for people to get out and cast their ballots at early voting locations. Early voting kicked off Monday in Washington and will start Saturday in Maryland.

"From Sunday through Wednesday, winds of hurricane force are expected to lash exposed areas of the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic states, leading to potentially serious coastal erosion and coastal flooding," the National Hurricane Center reported.

The weather service also warns "the buildup of tides over multiple tidal cycles should exacerbate the situation."...
Northeast in crosshairs of 'superstorm' Sandy - CNN.com
 
Lieutenant Dan is not afraid. :lol:

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZH9ebAZouk]Lieutenant Dan and the Storm - YouTube[/ame]
 
I don't understand why they label Cat 1 hurricane as superstorm.

Is it looks like 1993 Superstorm? known as 1993 Storm of the Century or Great Blizzard of 1993.
 
That is because there is another cold front that is running toward against Sandy, anytime when cold air front collides warm air storm, it brews up even much more powerful. Its like an accident in the weather is waiting to happen.

I see that I am in area where there is very likely power outrages, I'm now preparing for this.

I don't understand why they label Cat 1 hurricane as superstorm.

Is it looks like 1993 Superstorm? known as 1993 Storm of the Century or Great Blizzard of 1993.
 
That is because there is another cold front that is running toward against Sandy, anytime when cold air front collides warm air storm, it brews up even much more powerful. Its like an accident in the weather is waiting to happen.

I see that I am in area where there is very likely power outrages, I'm now preparing for this.

hey is there in your area raining yet? i assume almost two hours from here.
 
Very overcast and cool here, but so far no rain....it's windy tho', and the Fla.-GA. football game is today here in Jax....the Beaches have closed down all festivals for the weekend until the storm passes....Beach residents are very worried about more erosion....the Surfers are out there having a ball tho'.
 
Very overcast and cool here, but so far no rain....it's windy tho', and the Fla.-GA. football game is today here in Jax....the Beaches have closed down all festivals for the weekend until the storm passes....Beach residents are very worried about more erosion....the Surfers are out there having a ball tho'.

wow, surfers LOVE to surf during hurricane time because water is more rough, just like Hawaii.
 
Very overcast and cool here, but so far no rain....it's windy tho', and the Fla.-GA. football game is today here in Jax....the Beaches have closed down all festivals for the weekend until the storm passes....Beach residents are very worried about more erosion....the Surfers are out there having a ball tho'.

We would go to Galveston when I was a kid. Waves were too small to surf much but when storms came in that changed everything. The undertow would get pretty bad though too. We also go to Surfside beach but the son of the local Fire Chief died in the undertow so they got much more strict. Got arrested once there for it. Got to ride in a paddy wagon! :lol:
 
The outside is very bright in here, so I'm out of hurricane range.

It will be different if I stay at Gally.
 
wow, surfers LOVE to surf during hurricane time because water is more rough, just like Hawaii.

No, I was in Hawaii without hurricane and OBX with hurricane Bill, the wave is way too dangerous for surfers to be in ocean with hurricane. It's called rip current, Hawaii ocean without storm can have high wave, as high as 40 ft, but not as dangerous due to minimal rip current. Only stupid surfer will go to ocean with hurricane, it's 100% certainly death trap. Hurricane mess up the rip current, and its death trap.
 
No, I was in Hawaii without hurricane and OBX with hurricane Bill, the wave is way too dangerous for surfers to be in ocean with hurricane. It's called rip current, Hawaii ocean without storm can have high wave, as high as 40 ft, but not as dangerous due to minimal rip current. Only stupid surfer will go to ocean with hurricane, it's 100% certainly death trap. Hurricane mess up the rip current, and its death trap.

There is certain area in Hawaii has bad rip current, especially small and isolated beaches.

It isn't my decision about surfers and if surfers want go surf in beach during hurricane, so they are on their own risk - just like to pay the consequence.
 
Sandy barely brushed past us; just a little rain and wind. I'm more concerned about my family in CT, and AD members in the Northeastern coastal zone.

http://www.weather.com/
 
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I said minimal rip current in Hawaii, and Hawaii ocean is more stable without hurricane. Once Hurricane gets in the path, the rip current gets messed up, no way surfers can get out safely. Remember, I was in Waimea Bay, the home of North Shore Hawaii. I have seen 40 ft waves done, they are very even, and predictable but yeah rough if not doing right.

AND I was in OBX when Hurricane Bill passing by, I saw the ocean, gawd! No way surfers can survive there. Maybe a day or earlier, nice waves there yes but not when Hurricane is in the path.

There is certain area in Hawaii has bad rip current, especially small and isolated beaches.

It isn't my decision about surfers and if surfers want go surf in beach during hurricane, so they are on their own risk - just like to pay the consequence.
 
There is certain area in Hawaii has bad rip current, especially small and isolated beaches.

You are correct. I can't remember if I posted it here but I thought I was going to die at a small beach in Kona this past May. Many of my friends thought that I did die. Several were crying when I came out of the water. Then, not 30 minutes later we had to pull a friend out of knee deep water because they couldn't get out. There wasn't a storm either. It was a nice calm day.
 
I said minimal rip current in Hawaii, and Hawaii ocean is more stable without hurricane. Once Hurricane gets in the path, the rip current gets messed up, no way surfers can get out safely. Remember, I was in Waimea Bay, the home of North Shore Hawaii. I have seen 40 ft waves done, they are very even, and predictable but yeah rough if not doing right.

AND I was in OBX when Hurricane Bill passing by, I saw the ocean, gawd! No way surfers can survive there. Maybe a day or earlier, nice waves there yes but not when Hurricane is in the path.

That why RR said surfers will only go if they have balls.
 
That's my point, when one calms down and let rip current deal and move that swimmer into position, can be easily rescue, but with hurricane, impossible. RIP current usually goes in rectangular circle, have to follow the rip current to the point where one can reach shore safely.

You are correct. I can't remember if I posted it here but I thought I was going to die at a small beach in Kona this past May. Many of my friends thought that I did die. Several were crying when I came out of the water. Then, not 30 minutes later we had to pull a friend out of knee deep water because they couldn't get out. There wasn't a storm either. It was a nice calm day.
 
wow, surfers LOVE to surf during hurricane time because water is more rough, just like Hawaii.

The news showed a dog swimming in the ocean with huge waves, the owner has to be an idiot to let their dog in the water with huge waves . The dog had trouble getting out of the water.
 
You are correct. I can't remember if I posted it here but I thought I was going to die at a small beach in Kona this past May. Many of my friends thought that I did die. Several were crying when I came out of the water. Then, not 30 minutes later we had to pull a friend out of knee deep water because they couldn't get out. There wasn't a storm either. It was a nice calm day.

Oh wow, that's scary to get in rip current and without lifeguard and education about swimming in ocean, the rookie/inexperienced swimmers will die when they try to fight the rip current.

For me, my father teach me about how to get out of rip current by using parallel to other side, but I haven't been encounter into rip current in my life and it could happen in anytime.
 
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