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#11. Posted:
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haha bitches i live in fla turned away from us
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#12. Posted:
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Here's the next nautical target for Earl ... Diamond Shoals buoy located just off to the southeast of that location pictured above.
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I'm expecting the eye of Earl to go either right over this buoy, or just to the east, around 0300-0600 GMT. From there, the track seems to be just offshore then NNE towards Cape Cod and the islands of Marthas Vineyard and Nantucket (which are swanky resort areas normally crowded with visitors on a weekend in late summer). The current GFS track goes right over Nantucket as a cat-2 storm, so that will be rather a strong impact even for this exposed island used to big winter storms and hurricanes. That visit should come around 2100-midnight Friday.
On Saturday, what's likely to be cat-1 Earl will move across western Nova Scotia into southeast New Brunswick making a final landfall near Saint John NB (not to be confused with Saint John's Newfoundland). The winds for these regions may be as strong as 60 knots gusting to 80 or 90, so a bit of damage potential there even though these are regions very similar to western Ireland well used to strong winds and with most buildings well above the tidal range even at its most extreme. The Bay of Fundy already has the largest tidal range in the world (about ten metres) and so nothing much is built anywhere near the beaches there as storm surges would be an annual or three-yearly event. And western Nova Scotia tends to be quite rocky and the shoreline towns are well up from sea level by the time you get past the wharves and marinas. Still, there are one or two villages that might need to be evacuated if this hurricane keeps its intensity and tracks in as expected.
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I'm expecting the eye of Earl to go either right over this buoy, or just to the east, around 0300-0600 GMT. From there, the track seems to be just offshore then NNE towards Cape Cod and the islands of Marthas Vineyard and Nantucket (which are swanky resort areas normally crowded with visitors on a weekend in late summer). The current GFS track goes right over Nantucket as a cat-2 storm, so that will be rather a strong impact even for this exposed island used to big winter storms and hurricanes. That visit should come around 2100-midnight Friday.
On Saturday, what's likely to be cat-1 Earl will move across western Nova Scotia into southeast New Brunswick making a final landfall near Saint John NB (not to be confused with Saint John's Newfoundland). The winds for these regions may be as strong as 60 knots gusting to 80 or 90, so a bit of damage potential there even though these are regions very similar to western Ireland well used to strong winds and with most buildings well above the tidal range even at its most extreme. The Bay of Fundy already has the largest tidal range in the world (about ten metres) and so nothing much is built anywhere near the beaches there as storm surges would be an annual or three-yearly event. And western Nova Scotia tends to be quite rocky and the shoreline towns are well up from sea level by the time you get past the wharves and marinas. Still, there are one or two villages that might need to be evacuated if this hurricane keeps its intensity and tracks in as expected.
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#13. Posted:
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Joined: May 29, 201014Year Member
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Who ever is on that coast i wish them luck.
Im lucky that im not on there.
Im lucky that im not on there.
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#14. Posted:
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NEW SMYRNA ,FLORIDA <3 FTW
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#15. Posted:
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The North Carolina. THE Carolinas!
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#16. Posted:
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I hope my coach cancels football practice
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#17. Posted:
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Its Already a Cat 4? Right... But Hurricanes Are Fun ive Been in So many Of Them . Just Have Fun
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#18. Posted:
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zxLucasxz wrote Its Already a Cat 4? Right... But Hurricanes Are Fun ive Been in So many Of Them . Just Have Fun
WTF
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#19. Posted:
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we never get hurricanes where i live in canada
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#20. Posted:
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GlitchMw2 wrote The North Carolina. THE Carolinas!yeah my uncle went surfing this mourning and the waves were huge
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