The Navy Research Lab at Monterrey has one model plot tracking Hurricane Earl over the Turks & Caicos, possibly the Atlantic Coast of Florida and into the Carolinas. So far they are still saying this is one of several likely paths that the rapidly strengthening hurricane will take.
Earl went from a Cat 1 to a Cat 3 in less than 24 hours.
Looks like he's now a cat4 and vering north/northwest. Hopefully to avoid any islands and coastlines. Scary!
Keeping an eye out on it via http://www.stormpulse.com/
looks like it will nick North Carolina but cut across the New England states.
I'm on the disaster relief team and I won't breathe a sigh of relief until November 30th.
I really hate September.
Hoping it turns northeast in time, eastcoasters.
redkimba- thanks for that link. It is the easiest to read most up to date page I have found yet for Hurricane/storm information.
You would think that living in south florida that would be the front page of every news webpage but nope.
I'm hoping these two just cycle out into the colder atlantic water and leave all of us be
My favorite weather sites for Hurricane season.
http://www.weathercarib.com/
NexSat (http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/nexsat-bin/nexsat.cgi?BASIN=CONUS&SUB_BASIN=focus_regions&CCA=NorthAmerica-CONUS-East&SSC=GulfOfMexico-x-x&PRODUCT=vis_ir_background&SUB_PRODUCT=goes&AGE=Latest&SIZE=Thumb&DISPLAY=Single&PATH=CONUS/focus_regions/NorthAmerica-CONUS-East/GulfOfMexico-x-x/vis_ir_background/goes&CURRENT=20100702.1615.goes_11.visir.bckgr.NorthAmerica-CONUS-East_GulfOfMexico-x-x.DAY.jpg)
Fiona is marching right behind Earl.