Tag Archives: Hurricane Dean

Dean’s course

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Looks like Old Mexico is going to get the schnitz (with Cancun turned into Rangoon), tomorrow through Thursday. Hopefully, after crossing the Yucatan’s jungled, hilly waist, however, Dean will be a shadow of its former self. At least the cenotes will get recharged.

Lake Travis declining

The road to the docks was covered by rising water yesterday at Anderson Mill Marina. I had to turn around on the steep hill descending to the road, in order to retreat. I noticed half a dozen cars and trucks parked on the hill, as if their owners had come early to taken their boats out before the water came up. They would be be in for a surprise, I thought, when they came back and found the water had risen to block their retreat. But I see now that it didn’t. In fact, it has fallen a little, by this morning, to 686.43 feet msl. Mr. B. and I might be able to sail, after all, in this last week before school resumes– if Hurricane Dean stays well south of Texas. So far it looks like it will.

Hurricane trimmer

Accuweather’s Joe Bastardi, as usual, has some out-of-the-box thinking on hurricanes, such as the saving grace of the high peaks of the Hispaniola mountain ranges:

"I can remember my [meteorologist] dad saying to me ‘[D]o you realize how much worse things would be for the southeast United States if there was no Hispaniola?’…as big as Flora [1963] was it never got its core back, nor did Inez in 1966 until it was out in the gulf and even then it never got back to what it was before Hispaniola…In 1998, Georges did battle with the island and because of that, was not the storm it could have been. And in 2005 Jeanne got tangled up there for a while."

The mountains, guarding part of the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico, have skimmed the intensity of more than one big hurricane. Unfortunately, those peaks only tugged on Hurricane Dean as it passed well to the south instead of trying to cross them.

Dean-o

All eyes are still on Dean, as it gets ready to clobber Jamaica tomorrow. Inevitably, someone has put up a page of nothing but hurricane and Gulf of Mexico graphics (some of them in motion) to facilitate the Dean watchers. Stare at them long and hard. Repeat after me: "Dean will stay away from the Texas coast. He will stay away from the Texas coast."

UPDATE: Be a voyeur. Read the "Pleas for Help" bulletin board at stormCARIB, the Caribbean Hurricane Network. Be glad you’re not there.

Mean Dean

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This sucker doesn’t compress well, but it shows something hopeful for Texas. Namely that the models like Hurricane Dean going into Mexico instead of the Texas coast. Crossing the Yucatan should slow it down a lot, and if it doesn’t get stalled when it comes out, it could be a minimal storm after that. Link via Fresh Bilge where Alan has more.

UPDATE  LCRA’s Bob Rose doesn’t see Texas getting off easy at all, and notes that the Hurricane Center now sees Dean only clipping the northern Yucatan, which would hardly slow it down, and a low pressure area moving toward Texas could pull it farther north: "…Dean will be a large storm upon landfall and could threaten much of the Texas [coast?] with high winds and torrential rain even if it makes landfall along the lower coast."

MORE  I do like this note of Accuweather’s Joe Bastardi: "Here is what the weather over the past has done… Through the Yucatan channel, most major storms hit the US. Through the Yucatan from east to west, they dont."