LIVE Wednesday evening video update discussing the latest on Hurricane Dorian happening now: https://t.co/p69imI5NeY pic.twitter.com/vwruQI1bRz
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 29, 2019
LIVE Wednesday evening video update discussing the latest on Hurricane Dorian happening now: https://t.co/p69imI5NeY pic.twitter.com/vwruQI1bRz
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 29, 2019
Yikes: the reliable HWRF model which really did well with Michael last year explodes Hurricane #Dorian to Category 5.
With the satellite & radar presentation this evening, things are progressing quickly in that direction. ? pic.twitter.com/HRaej6CWsz
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) August 29, 2019
The 18z ECMWF model update for Hurricane #Dorian is consistent with a major hurricane heading due west into South Florida. This model is still slightly south of the NHC landfall point near Melbourne. pic.twitter.com/gZQAWcAByU
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) August 29, 2019
Sunset Atmore,Al @spann @NWSMobile @rzweather @StormHour @ThomasGeboyWX @michaelwhitewx @tv_leader #alwx #sunset pic.twitter.com/hYwiF6ui9m
— Ditto Gorme (@sandtrapper) August 29, 2019
LIVE AT 8PM WITH LATEST ON DORIAN… I am finalizing graphics and details for a special LIVE video update that will start at 8PM in the Live tab in the RedZone Weather app and on Facebook Live. Hurricane Dorian now has maximum winds of 80 mph. The system continues to strengthen. See you at 8, hope you’ll join us!
Center/eye of Hurricane #Dorian is clearly visible on the Puerto Rico NEXRAD this evening… Won't be long till Dorian is out of range. Strengthening system this evening with max winds in the 80-85mph range. pic.twitter.com/pCBQaTHuCc
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
I'd quit if this actually happened.
There are so many possible scenarios because of blocking ridge to the north. Dorian will need to travel west in order to finally escape northward. pic.twitter.com/uMVJliEYT0
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) August 28, 2019
Here are the 5 PM AST/EDT August 28 Key Messages for Hurricane #Dorian. For more information see: https://t.co/tW4KeFW0gB pic.twitter.com/uu34UdDYoW
— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) August 28, 2019
From the NHC 4PM discussion on #Dorian… "All indications are that by this Labor Day weekend, a powerful hurricane will be near or over the Florida Peninsula."
State of emergency declared in Florida ahead of Dorian's arrival. pic.twitter.com/350ibjQrJr
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
As Hurricane #Dorian approaches, I’ve declared a state of emergency to ensure local governments and emergency management agencies have ample time, resources and flexibility to get prepared. Please continue to follow local reports and @FLSERT for updates. https://t.co/FyQM6wd8er
— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) August 28, 2019
HURRICANE DORIAN LIKELY TO BE A MAJOR HURRICANE THIS WEEKEND; GULF IMPACTS REMAIN UNCERTAIN… Hurricane Dorian continues to gain strength this evening as it emerges over the warm waters of the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. Model trends over the last 6-8 hours have been discouraging for our local area, to say the least, although as I often caution, we need to focus on the overall trends and not individual model runs. The Florida Peninsula has a very high chance of having direct impacts from Dorian when the system will very likely be a major hurricane this weekend into Monday. Beyond that, we still do not have a firm grasp of where Dorian ends up.
SOUTH ALABAMA & NW FLORIDA: POTENTIAL DORIAN IMPACTS DISCUSSION… The big takeaway as far as potential local impacts in south Alabama and northwest Florida remains that we still do not know whether direct local impacts from Dorian will happen, although the latest model runs point to that being still in the realm of possibilities. Earlier today, I mentioned that the Euro/ECMWF model had featured encouraging trends showing the system remaining to the east of our area, cautioning that further model changes were likely. Indeed, those changes happened. The latest run (12Z) of the Euro/ECMWF model shows a substantial (perhaps category 2 or 3) hurricane slamming into south Florida followed by an emergence over the southern Gulf of Mexico then a rapid turn to the northwest with a potential landfall as a major hurricane in northwest Florida late next week. That is ONE idea from ONE run of ONE model, but I type that out to say: We are, by NO means, “out of the woods” just yet. It’s important to comparatively note that the GFS and Canadian models show a much different scenario, with Dorian making a Florida Peninsula landfall much farther north then very slowly weakening in the days that follow with little to no local impacts in south Alabama or northwest Florida. Again, the big headline here is: Please keep checking back with me for forecast updates in the days ahead. The situation is fluid and evolving rapidly.
4PM ADVISORY ON HURRICANE DORIAN… Hurricane Dorian is packing maximum sustained winds of 80 mph with higher gusts near the center of the storm. As of 4PM CDT, the center of Dorian was located at 18.8N and 65.5W. Minimum central pressure is down to 997 millibars, indicating strengthening is happening. Dorian is moving northwest at 14 mph. The center of Dorian has recently emerged over the southwestern Atlantic just to the north of the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Some review information from my previous Noon post…
MAJOR HURRICANE IMPACTS POSSIBLE IN EAST FLORIDA… The official forecast from the National Hurricane Center now states that Dorian will likely approach the Atlantic/eastern coast of Florida as a category 3, major hurricane on Sunday into Monday. Interests in and near West Palm Beach, Port St. Lucie, Fort Pierce, Vero Beach, Palm Bay, Melbourne, Cocoa Beach, Titusville, Merritt Island, Orlando, New Smyrna Beach, Daytona Beach, Ormond Beach, Palm Coast, St. Augustine, Jacksonville, Fernandina Beach, Brunswick (GA), and Savannah (GA) should CLOSELY monitor the progress of this potentially dangerous hurricane setup. Rapid intensification is not out of the question, and the intensity forecast of Dorian may have to be adjusted higher in future forecasts!
CENTER OF DORIAN MISSES PUERTO RICO TO THE EAST; INTENSIFICATION LIKELY… 2-3 days ago, there was some hope that the core of Dorian would be disrupted by the high, rugged terrain of Hispaniola. Yesterday, there was hope that Dorian would be somewhat disrupted by the hills and mountains of Puerto Rico. Today, it is clear that the center of Dorian will miss the land areas to the east and have an unhindered path to strengthening over the next 24-72 hours. Definitely not the scenario that anyone wanted. Land interaction will have very little to no effect on the developing storm.
WATCHES & WARNINGS DISCUSSION… A Hurricane Warning continues for all of the U.S. Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, and Vieques & Culebra. Puerto Rico continues to be under a Hurricane Watch and a Tropical Storm Warning. Hurricane Watches will be needed for the Turks & Caicos islands and parts of The Bahamas later this evening or on Thursday. Hurricane Watches will become necessary for parts of the Atlantic coast of Florida probably on Friday or Saturday morning.
APP ALERTS… Many consistent updates will be posted over the next few days in the RedZone Weather app. redzoneweather.com/app is the link for the free download. Be sure to visit the Alerts tab (bottom right corner) and tap the large, yellow “Alert Settings” button to customize the alerts you’d like to receive from me. Everyone should toggle ON Medium-Level Alerts. If you like a lot of info, be sure to toggle ON Low-Level Alerts.
I’ll have another detailed update later this evening on Facebook and in the RedZone Weather app. Have a nice afternoon!
4PM advisory for Hurricane Dorian shows a strengthening storm capable of becoming a dangerous major hurricane that will likely impact the Florida Peninsula Sunday into Monday. Detailed update here: https://t.co/aJ3UN0jC06 pic.twitter.com/rmigiwwJ6T
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
RZW EXEC: DORIAN UPDATE… RZW Exec partners, good Wednesday afternoon! Unfortunately, we just don’t have a concrete answer yet on whether Hurricane Dorian will impact south Alabama or northwest Florida. After some encouraging model runs over the last 24 hours, the latest runs of the models have been totally discouraging with direct local impacts indicated. The good news is this scenario can and will change in the coming hours as we continue to get more data in on this increasingly dangerous hurricane. Regardless of if local impacts in south Alabama and northwest Florida occur, confidence continues to grow that the Florida Peninsula will endure direct impacts from a major hurricane on Sunday into Monday. Below you’ll see two paragraphs we will debut later this evening followed by a recap of my midday public post. As always, please let me know if you have specific questions, concerns, or decision support needs. The graphic below will debut publicly around 4PM.
HURRICANE DORIAN LIKELY TO BE A MAJOR HURRICANE THIS WEEKEND; GULF IMPACTS REMAIN UNCERTAIN… Hurricane Dorian continues to gain strength this evening as it emerges over the warm waters of the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. Model trends over the last 6-8 hours have been discouraging for our local area, to say the least, although as I often caution, we need to focus on the overall trends and not individual model runs. The Florida Peninsula has a very high chance of having direct impacts from Dorian when the system will very likely be a major hurricane this weekend into Monday. Beyond that, we still do not have a firm grasp of where Dorian ends up.
SOUTH ALABAMA & NW FLORIDA: POTENTIAL DORIAN IMPACTS DISCUSSION… The big takeaway as far as potential local impacts in south Alabama and northwest Florida remains that we still do not know whether direct local impacts from Dorian will happen, although the latest model runs point to that being still in the realm of possibilities. Earlier today, I mentioned that the Euro/ECMWF model had featured encouraging trends showing the system remaining to the east of our area, cautioning that further model changes were likely. Indeed, those changes happened. The latest run (12Z) of the Euro/ECMWF model shows a substantial (perhaps category 2 or 3) hurricane slamming into south Florida followed by an emergence over the southern Gulf of Mexico then a rapid turn to the northwest with a potential landfall as a major hurricane in northwest Florida late next week. That is ONE idea from ONE run of ONE model, but I type that out to say: We are, by NO means, “out of the woods” just yet. It’s important to comparatively note that the GFS and Canadian models show a much different scenario, with Dorian making a Florida Peninsula landfall much farther north then very slowly weakening in the days that follow with little to no local impacts in south Alabama or northwest Florida. Again, the big headline here is: Please keep checking back with me for forecast updates in the days ahead. The situation is fluid and evolving rapidly.
DORIAN CURRENT INFO… Hurricane Dorian is packing maximum sustained winds of 75 mph with higher gusts near the center of the storm. As of 1PM CDT, the center of Dorian was located at 18.3N and 65.0W. Minimum central pressure is down to 997 millibars, indicating strengthening is happening. Dorian is moving northwest at 13 mph. We note the center is directly over St. Croix and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
CENTER OF DORIAN MISSES PUERTO RICO TO THE EAST; INTENSIFICATION LIKELY… 2-3 days ago, there was some hope that the core of Dorian would be disrupted by the high, rugged terrain of Hispaniola. Yesterday, there was hope that Dorian would be somewhat disrupted by the hills and mountains of Puerto Rico. Today, it is clear that the center of Dorian will miss the land areas to the east and have an unhindered path to strengthening over the next 24-72 hours. Definitely not the scenario that anyone wanted. Land interaction will have very little to no effect on the developing storm. Dorian will continue to emerge over the warm waters of the southwestern Atlantic Ocean in the next 12 hours as it continues moving to the northwest.
WATCHES & WARNINGS DISCUSSION… A Hurricane Warning continues for all of the U.S. Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, and Vieques & Culebra. Puerto Rico continues to be under a Hurricane Watch and a Tropical Storm Warning. Hurricane Watches will be needed for the Turks & Caicos islands and parts of The Bahamas later this evening or on Thursday. Hurricane Watches will become necessary for parts of the Atlantic coast of Florida probably on Friday or Saturday morning.
MAJOR HURRICANE IMPACTS POSSIBLE IN EAST FLORIDA… The official forecast from the National Hurricane Center now states that Dorian will likely approach the Atlantic/eastern coast of Florida as a category 3, major hurricane on Sunday into Monday. Interests in and near West Palm Beach, Port St. Lucie, Fort Pierce, Vero Beach, Palm Bay, Melbourne, Cocoa Beach, Titusville, Merritt Island, Orlando, New Smyrna Beach, Daytona Beach, Ormond Beach, Palm Coast, St. Augustine, Jacksonville, Fernandina Beach, Brunswick (GA), and Savannah (GA) should CLOSELY monitor the progress of this potentially dangerous hurricane setup. Rapid intensification is not out of the question, and the intensity forecast of Dorian may have to be adjusted higher in future forecasts!
APP ALERTS… Many consistent updates will be posted over the next few days in the RedZone Weather app. redzoneweather.com/app is the link for the free download. Be sure to visit the Alerts tab (bottom right corner) and tap the large, yellow “Alert Settings” button to customize the alerts you’d like to receive from me. Everyone should toggle ON Medium-Level Alerts. If you like a lot of info, be sure to toggle ON Low-Level Alerts.
3:16PM radar loop from Puerto Rico shows the center of Hurricane #Dorian has crossed into the Atlantic Ocean… Significant impacts possible in parts of the Florida Peninsula this weekend into Monday! pic.twitter.com/L8fjAdnTNS
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
2PM CDT view of Hurricane Dorian shows the center of the system over the U.S. Virgin Islands… System is moving northeast at 13 mph. Max. winds at 75 mph. pic.twitter.com/2kuv6spqQI
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
…and here come the #Dorian memes. ????? pic.twitter.com/6XeAThWozC
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON UPDATE: DORIAN NOW A HURRICANE; MISSES PUERTO RICO TO THE EAST; INTENSIFICATION LIKELY… Dorian has strengthened into a category 1 hurricane this afternoon with maximum sustained winds near 75 mph. The official forecast from the National Hurricane Center now says Dorian will approach the Florida Atlantic coast as a major hurricane this weekend. While we still have quite a bit of uncertainty as to just how strong Dorian will be at landfall AND where Dorian will ultimately end up, I am encouraged that model trends have been positive for south Alabama and northwest Florida today. All of the major weather models, including the ECMWF/Euro, now suggest the core of Dorian will remain to the east of our local area as we go into next week. We’re not completely “out of the woods” just yet, but the trends have been encouraging. Let’s look at some Wednesday afternoon details…
DORIAN CURRENT INFO… Hurricane Dorian is packing maximum sustained winds of 75 mph with higher gusts near the center of the storm. As of 1PM CDT, the center of Dorian was located at 18.3N and 65.0W. Minimum central pressure is down to 997 millibars, indicating strengthening is happening. Dorian is moving northwest at 13 mph. We note the center is directly over St. Croix and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
CENTER OF DORIAN MISSES PUERTO RICO TO THE EAST; INTENSIFICATION LIKELY… 2-3 days ago, there was some hope that the core of Dorian would be disrupted by the high, rugged terrain of Hispaniola. Yesterday, there was hope that Dorian would be somewhat disrupted by the hills and mountains of Puerto Rico. Today, it is clear that the center of Dorian will miss the land areas to the east and have an unhindered path to strengthening over the next 24-72 hours. Definitely not the scenario that anyone wanted. Land interaction will have very little to no effect on the developing storm. Dorian will continue to emerge over the warm waters of the southwestern Atlantic Ocean in the next 12 hours as it continues moving to the northwest.
WATCHES & WARNINGS DISCUSSION… A Hurricane Warning continues for all of the U.S. Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, and Vieques & Culebra. Puerto Rico continues to be under a Hurricane Watch and a Tropical Storm Warning. Hurricane Watches will be needed for the Turks & Caicos islands and parts of The Bahamas later this evening or on Thursday. Hurricane Watches will become necessary for parts of the Atlantic coast of Florida probably on Friday or Saturday morning.
MIDDAY LOOK AT POTENTIAL LOCAL IMPACTS IN SOUTH ALABAMA & NW FLORIDA… Let me start here by saying we are not “out of the woods” just yet. Please do NOT take what I’m about to say as “set in stone.” Trends are encouraging, but you can bet trends can and will change. Forecasting tropical storms and hurricanes is incredibly challenging and model data often wildly shifts based on new input. I am highly encouraged this afternoon that NO major weather model shows Dorian coming close to south Alabama or northwest Florida as of midday Wednesday. We looked at the ECMWF/Euro model last night, which had a scenario showing a decaying Dorian approaching our area by Wednesday of next week. The Euro model, like the GFS, Canadian, and others, now shows a scenario where Dorian will harass the eastern coastal areas of Florida before making a sharp, right, northerly turn. This means that all of the Florida Peninsula, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina need to closely monitor the progress of this system. We need to closely monitor trends over the next few days. It’s still very much “up in the air” where Dorian ends up.
MAJOR HURRICANE IMPACTS POSSIBLE IN EAST FLORIDA… The official forecast from the National Hurricane Center now states that Dorian will likely approach the Atlantic/eastern coast of Florida as a category 3, major hurricane on Sunday into Monday. Interests in and near West Palm Beach, Port St. Lucie, Fort Pierce, Vero Beach, Palm Bay, Melbourne, Cocoa Beach, Titusville, Merritt Island, Orlando, New Smyrna Beach, Daytona Beach, Ormond Beach, Palm Coast, St. Augustine, Jacksonville, Fernandina Beach, Brunswick (GA), and Savannah (GA) should CLOSELY monitor the progress of this potentially dangerous hurricane setup. Rapid intensification is not out of the question, and the intensity forecast of Dorian may have to be adjusted higher in future forecasts!
APP ALERTS… Many consistent updates will be posted over the next few days in the RedZone Weather app. redzoneweather.com/app is the link for the free download. Be sure to visit the Alerts tab (bottom right corner) and tap the large, yellow “Alert Settings” button to customize the alerts you’d like to receive from me. Everyone should toggle ON Medium-Level Alerts. If you like a lot of info, be sure to toggle ON Low-Level Alerts.
I’ll have another detailed update later this evening on Facebook and in the RedZone Weather app. Have a nice afternoon!
#Dorian is now a hurricane, packing max. winds near 75mph. The system will likely be a major hurricane as it moves toward the Florida Peninsula later this weekend. Full midday discussion, including a look at potential local impacts here: https://t.co/PgipBfkOf9 pic.twitter.com/TEZHJprDpN
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
#Dorian continues to improve in organization and is almost a hurricane this afternoon… The core of the storm will miss Puerto Rico to the east, meaning intensification will largely be likely unhindered in the hours ahead. pic.twitter.com/OqJiL7Dq8M
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
11AM advisory for Tropical Storm #Dorian indicates the system will likely be a major hurricane as it approaches the southeastern U.S. on Sunday… pic.twitter.com/CNiyy9cRWY
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019
Look at the sunshine ☀️ on Thursday! A frontal boundary slides south of our area into the northern Gulf, meaning we get a break from the storms. Coverage of rain and storms returns as we go into the weekend. pic.twitter.com/CVtdPlbpUy
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) August 28, 2019