The radar presentation remains lop sided with the heaviest to the north and east with very little to the south and west. David has a slew of great graphics on FOX 8 at 9 PM. The ones that are concerning are the model wind gusts that keep the center of Nicholas offshore from the Texas coast making landfall in Louisiana around Lake Charles.
IF that track proves correct, it will bring tropical storm wind gusts into the metro area on Wednesday challenging our power grids once again. OK the new track is in and it is not good for south Louisiana.
NHC continues to insist that the eye of Nicholas will make landfall in Texas, but what if it doesn't like David showed? That would mean stronger wind gusts are coming our way. The other change is NHC almost stalls Nicholas as a depression over SW Louisiana keeping us on the wet side. Here's there newest center line track that stalls/slows down NW of Lafayette.
If David's model is correct and Nicholas stays farther to the east, look for that map of tropical storm force winds to shift towards us tomorrow. They haven't increased their rainfall predictions, but if it slows as they indicate, these totals may be too low.
There is dry air wrapping around the western and southern sides, but the wet side is producing drenching tropical squalls.
So our main concern will be the heavy rain threat that David showed will be greatest on Wednesday.
1 comment:
On the screen where it shows all the green of the rain it looks like the shape of a monster!! 😞 I hate this I wish it would just go away!!
Post a Comment