Looks like Helene may be a name to remember

I'm no expert on Florida's geography, but I'm guessing that the eye of Helene is pretty big as seen by the Tampa radar and the GOES satellite.

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Sounds like it is "Katrinaish".




Does this remind anyone of Katrina, with the storm surge predicted? Our Mississippi gulf coast was clobbered by the storm surge.
 
Yeesh. The central pressure dropped from 970 mb to 942 in under 24 hours. Small wonder the winds have kicked up to 130 mph. Batten down, people. It is a BIG storm. From the NHC advisory :eek::eek::eek::

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 60 miles (95 km) from the center and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 310 miles (500 km).
 
Wind is still howling here but I believe the worst has passed. 3/4 million without power on the West coast and Helene hasn't even hit the beach yet. This is one sneaky trailer trash *****, except more than one gonna lose the house. Best wishes going out to Big Bend folks. Joe
 
The eye is brushing Fish Creek/Dekle Beach area. Perry, Lamont and Greenville look to be in the crosshairs. I think the eye will miss Tallahassee. That east jog at the last second. NHC shows winds of 140 mph.
 
Down here in Port Charlotte, the wind has died down, but Charlotte Harbor is still rising. We've got about 2 feet of water in the middle of our street. It's got to come up another 3 feet or so before it's lapping at the front door. High tide is 3 AM…hoping it doesn't come up much more before receding. Having an argument with my B-I-L over whether the water will start receding after the tide peaks.
 
Up and out 'em in the dark. Did a cursory check with a flashlight when taking the dogs out. Didn't see any major damage. Not venturing out until sun up. Saw the FD outlast night, guessing there were downed power lines. Would rather not encounter that.
Power is out. But if that's all I got, I'm thankful
 
The armpit (Big Bend) is largely unpopulated. So there aren't many weather stations to get readings from. I monitored as many as I could last night, and none showed surface winds beyond Category 1.
 
I recall time spent in and around the Little Tennessee, Nantahala Rivers, the waterfalls on the Cullasaja. I've seen the spillway opened at Fontana and the overflow off Cheoah Dam. What will the places and in particular the people experience?
With the potential for disaster over the entire region I still find myself wondering what will happen to the Troll Tavern under the bridge on the Chattahoochee in Helen, GA.
 
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