At this stage, the only things to show are radar & satellite views along with wind speeds and wave heights. Landfall was at Port Fourchon and she's now moving over Golden Meadow heading just to the east of Houma.
All of southeast LA/MS are under the heavy rain shield. As these radar views show.
Ida has a classic satellite presentation, especially on the color IR pic....totally symmetrical with a core eyewall.
The strongest winds will be moving over NOLA during the 3pm to 6 pm time frame. Note how many wind stations south of us are no longer reporting.
The only good news is wave heights are coming down from earlier, but it will take many hours for Ida's furry to wane. Stay sheltered in place as this is my final post until the internet returns. Will be back when the weather improves.
5 comments:
Stay safe bob Nola loves you. We left when you said people should get out and probably saved our lives. Sending good vibes to friends and family who stayed.
Thank you for posting for Bob. We know that we can always depend on Bob to give us the need information that we need to make important decisions.
Thank you so much for your informative posts. Ive known you since my childhood and still listen to your advice as an adult with my own family now.
Heard on the radio the hurricane is stalled now not moving for the last 30 mins. All the new stations are showing wind videos etc instead of new track and actual real news
Which radar is recommended…Accuweather and weather.com are showing a much different timeframe of red…like a 4 hour diff
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