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Major Hurricane Helene


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When an entire town is gone, another is completely cut off, record flooding. It is going to be hard to save homes like this. FEMA will be spending a lot of time and money on helping people out. Water is still in some homes, they can't even cut the dry wall yet.

3 hours ago, Bubbler86 said:

Florida state paying to build a temp road on Anna Maria Island so residents can get back to their houses and get their belongs.  Will take 3-5 days.   Going to be hard to save many first-floor homes unless that drywall gets cut out asap and drying started. 

 

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14 hours ago, GaWx said:

When comparing to the pre-Helene low SLP records of all time for any month and from any kind of system (see below), it looks like new all-time record low SLPs have likely been established by Helene in/near the corridor from the FL Big Bend through the GA cities of Valdosta, Warner Robbins, Macon, Milledgeville, and Athens. Helen, GA, probably just missed its record. The prior records were Idalia of 2023 (1049 mb) in the FL Big Bend and mainly from the 3/13/1993 “Storm of the Century” for the listed GA cities.

Record low SLPs (pre-Helene)(map will change once Helene is incorporated):

AllTimeRecordLowSLPs.gif
 

Dates of record low SLPs (pre-Helene): (3/13/1993 in green) (map will change once Helene is incorporated):

AllTimeWhenRecordLowSLPs.gif

ended up just sub 980 imby from Helene.  Pretty remarkable being on the west side of Atlanta.

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24 minutes ago, LithiaWx said:

ended up just sub 980 imby from Helene.  Pretty remarkable being on the west side of Atlanta.

 That appears to be a new record low for your area per the map. Based on the map, much of ATL area’s low was from 1/25/1978 (in blue). The map shows KATL’s record to be 981.4 mb from that. Their lowest hourly from Helene was 983.7 (29.08”) at 6AM. So, it appears KATL just missed the record as I don’t think it got much lower between hourlies since the center was well east of there.

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49 minutes ago, WxWatcher007 said:

There’s a strong signal that CV season was delayed but not quite denied. 90L and/or the wave behind it could become quite strong. 

 Good news is that this late in the season it would be unprecedented in the records for anything becoming a TS E of 50W in the MDR to make it to the CONUS. The latest for that is 9/25 (in 1893). But these could be big ACE producers. Kudos to the Euro Weeklies going back several weeks seeing this big increase in ACE for late Sep through 1st 1/2 of Oct!

 So, hopefully any TCGs out in the MDR occur E of 50W.

 The CONUS is not safe though as the next one progged to form in the Caribbean/Gulf is a concern. Hoping it won’t be strong or better yet never be a TC. But the 12Z GEFS is fairly bullish for something forming late week unfortunately. And the 12Z EPS is rather bullish for this a few days later.

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 Good news is that this late in the season it would be unprecedented in the records for anything becoming a TS E of 50W in the MDR to make it to the CONUS. The latest for that is 9/25 (in 1893). But these could be big ACE producers. Kudos to the Euro Weeklies going back several weeks seeing this big increase in ACE for late Sep through 1st 1/2 of Oct!
 So, hopefully any TCGs out in the MDR occur E of 50W.
 The CONUS is not safe though as the next one progged to form in the Caribbean/Gulf is a concern. Hoping it won’t be strong or better yet never be a TC. But the 12Z GEFS is fairly bullish for something forming late week unfortunately. And the 12Z EPS is rather bullish for this a few days later.
RE: Big ACE producers, wiith background mean SSTs still quite above normal across the MDR, we could see some late records fall. I believe Lorenzo holds the record for furthest east Category 4 or greater after September 28th. But you would think it would be very rare for an MDR system to reach the CONUS with ridging giving way to a more typical Fall pattern / October troughs over the central Atlantic. The only one I can think of in recent decades is Matthew.
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quite impressive how many have been restored already! last i recall here more then maybe 4million total out, down to 2 something now.

 

South East States

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1 hour ago, GaWx said:

 Good news is that this late in the season it would be unprecedented in the records for anything becoming a TS E of 50W in the MDR to make it to the CONUS. The latest for that is 9/25 (in 1893). But these could be big ACE producers. Kudos to the Euro Weeklies going back several weeks seeing this big increase in ACE for late Sep through 1st 1/2 of Oct!

 So, hopefully any TCGs out in the MDR occur E of 50W.

 The CONUS is not safe though as the next one progged to form in the Caribbean/Gulf is a concern. Hoping it won’t be strong or better yet never be a TC. But the 12Z GEFS is fairly bullish for something forming late week unfortunately. And the 12Z EPS is rather bullish for this a few days later.

Oops, I posted in the wrong thread. Agree though that any CVs are highly unlikely to be impactful here. 

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1 hour ago, Windspeed said:
1 hour ago, GaWx said:
 Good news is that this late in the season it would be unprecedented in the records for anything becoming a TS E of 50W in the MDR to make it to the CONUS. The latest for that is 9/25 (in 1893). But these could be big ACE producers. Kudos to the Euro Weeklies going back several weeks seeing this big increase in ACE for late Sep through 1st 1/2 of Oct!
 So, hopefully any TCGs out in the MDR occur E of 50W.
 The CONUS is not safe though as the next one progged to form in the Caribbean/Gulf is a concern. Hoping it won’t be strong or better yet never be a TC. But the 12Z GEFS is fairly bullish for something forming late week unfortunately. And the 12Z EPS is rather bullish for this a few days later.

RE: Big ACE producers, wiith background mean SSTs still quite above normal across the MDR, we could see some late records fall. I believe Lorenzo holds the record for furthest east Category 4 or greater after September 28th. But you would think it would be very rare for an MDR system to reach the CONUS with ridging giving way to a more typical Fall pattern / October troughs over the central Atlantic. The only one I can think of in recent decades is Matthew.

 Yeah, but Matthew didn’t become a TS until almost to 60W. There are several others that formed after 9/25 between 50 and 60W and that hit CONUS. So, hopefully any remaining MDR TCs form E of there and then recurve safely. 
 

-Hazel (1954) formed at 58W on Oct 5

-1898: formed at 58W on 9/25

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I am assuming that the highest maximum sustained winds were likely in a very tiny area in the very northeastern side of the eyewall at the immediate coast. My guess is 130 to 140 mph over the wetlands between Steinhatchee and Perry.

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I am assuming that the highest maximum sustained winds were likely in a very tiny area in the very northeastern side of the eyewall at the immediate coast. My guess is 130 to 140 mph over the wetlands between Steinhatchee and Perry.
Would have been the SE quadrant based on storm motion, most likely the ESE inner edge of eyewall band, when it had its most intense echoes while intersecting the shoreline. This flow coming off the north side of Deadman Bay. This would have been just NW of Steinhatchee within the Big Bend Wildlife Management Area. Nobody was there to record or document it, of course, unless they were recording on the back end route, Beach Road. At least that we yet know about.


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4 hours ago, Windspeed said:

Would have been the SE quadrant based on storm motion, most likely the ESE inner edge of eyewall band, when it had its most intense echoes while intersecting the shoreline. This flow coming off the north side of Deadman Bay. This would have been just NW of Steinhatchee within the Big Bend Wildlife Management Area. Nobody was there to record or document it, of course, unless they were recording on the back end route, Beach Road. At least that we yet know about.


1aba0afa309b2c757ff0ba286c8b45fb.jpg
a5e7a08a759dea3e2103a718a5d7aa21.jpg

 

Yeah, I suppose southeastern rather than northeastern. One thing clearly obvious from recon just before landfall was how lopsided the intensity was. The eastern side had Category 4 sustained winds, while the western side had extremely low weak winds in comparison. 

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5 hours ago, Floydbuster said:

 

Yeah, I suppose southeastern rather than northeastern. One thing clearly obvious from recon just before landfall was how lopsided the intensity was. The eastern side had Category 4 sustained winds, while the western side had extremely low weak winds in comparison. 

Definitely a weird storm to be so powerful on one side and really just a half-a-cane. Don’t see a lot of 120kt half storms but they do happen, and forward motion likely assisted this one. Only thing that kind of surprised me was the northern and northeastern eyewall being relatively tame on the ground. Both looked extremely strong on recon. I’m guessing max winds occurred between Keaton beach and Steinhatchee.

In other sad news, looks like Helene will pass Hurricane Floyd’s death toll in NC

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6 hours ago, Floydbuster said:

 

Yeah, I suppose southeastern rather than northeastern. One thing clearly obvious from recon just before landfall was how lopsided the intensity was. The eastern side had Category 4 sustained winds, while the western side had extremely low weak winds in comparison. 

Yep the fast forward motion enhanced this effect. The 1938 hurricane is a classic example of this for the Northeast.

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33 minutes ago, Picard said:

This is North Carolina's Katrina.  The extent of the damage and human tragedy isn't immediately apparent in the hours after, but in the days and weeks after.  Sad situation that is only getting worse.

Having a city of 100K cut off from the outside world and devastated makes that the case for sure, not to mention the other towns/cities impacted all throughout the region. My heart goes out to all those people and their families. It’ll be a very long and difficult road ahead. 

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The story is still being written and the dust hasn’t settled, but I’m going to wager when all is said and done hurricane Helene will be the most severe/devestating hurricane strike in United States history.  The amount of people this storm has affected is unimaginable.  

if we were to go back in time when this was a naked swirl In the Carribbean and I were to tell you that this was the outcome:

938 mbs, 140 mph winds with the strongest wind passing over marshland, and Tallahassee unaffected.  The result:  1,000 dead (TBD) and 120 billion in damage.  I’d be laughed off the board.  What this storm did is wild man.

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On 9/29/2024 at 12:57 AM, Jebman said:

There are sure a lot of people crying for help. Helene cut off many a community from help.

You guys are perfectly free to wish for Category 5 hurricanes.

But me, I am DONE with this stuff. I'm 60. I am getting seriously challenged from obsessing over walking most of my life. Walking is fine, but to idolize this like I did for 50 years, there are consequences. Serious consequences. My mom yells at me for being too slow. I see now my Dad was right, all those years. I always learn, THE HARD WAY, every time, in everything.

My heart BREAKS with deep sorrow as so many people are cut off. Many will be, for MONTHS to come, well into 2025!!!!!!!!

There may even be ANOTHER storm. We are going to be lucky just to survive to early December. There are probably going to be so many severe hurricanes that the entire Gulf Coast will have to be evacuated. Buda, Texas can't take another bad windstorm, we'd lose everything.

 

Huh? Lucky to survive until December?  Entire Gulf Coast evacuation?

 

Drama...  

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18 minutes ago, Normandy said:

The story is still being written and the dust hasn’t settled, but I’m going to wager when all is said and done hurricane Helene will be the most severe/devestating hurricane strike in United States history.  The amount of people this storm has affected is unimaginable.  

if we were to go back in time when this was a naked swirl In the Carribbean and I were to tell you that this was the outcome:

938 mbs, 140 mph winds with the strongest wind passing over marshland, and Tallahassee unaffected.  The result:  1,000 dead and 120 billion in damage.  I’d be laughed off the board.  What this storm did is wild man.

I doubt the actual death toll is anywhere close to that high. I am sure the vast major of missing just haven't been able to contact loved ones due to lack of communication. This is a common occurrence following major storms. That said, I do expect the toll to rise some due to the difficulty associated with conducting searches over a broad area when accessibility is hampered by damaged infrastructure, plus having to locate and notify next of kin. 

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