Hurricane Helene is Boobwatch 1 (1996)a formidable category 2 Hurricane creeping north through the Gulf of Mexico as of Thursday midday — and, importantly, it's still gaining strength. The situation is serious, with NOAA warning Floridians in particular to prepare for landfall this evening, and noting that "preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to completion."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Where will it land? When? How severe will it be at or near landfall? Where will it go once its incursion into the mainland has begun, and what will conditions be like there? There are no hard answers to any of these, only forecasts — typically doled out as illustrative maps. But the good news is that forecasts are, broadly speaking, powerfully accurate.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Here's the latest on what the immediate future holds in the form of maps:
According to NOAA's forecast cone as of 11:00 a.m. ET Thursday, coastal residents should be prepared for hurricane conditions as far west as Panama City, and as far east as the Clearwater area (though Tampa might want to batten down the hatches too, as of this writing, just in case).
The cone itself — meaning the geographical range likely to contain the path of the center of the storm — was showing potential direct hits anywhere from the area of St. George Island near the Bryant Patton Memorial Bridge in the west, to the proximity of Steinhatchee in the east.
To refresh your memory, NOAA's cone graphics predict the range of potential paths likely to be taken by the center of the storm. Storm surge and other severe conditions may well occur outside the cone, while inside the cone, there will always be some areas that experience relatively mild conditions.
SEE ALSO: Hurricane Helene: Watch Florida webcams live, including Panama City, Port St. JoeThis Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
According to the North Carolina Local CBS affiliate WNCT, Helene was expected to make landfall at approximately 8:00 p.m. CT (which is 9:00 p.m. ET). Their forecast showed the storm weakening from 120 mph winds at landfall to 65 mph when it reaches the vicinity of North Carolina about 12 hours later.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The above map, posted by a storm chaser calling himself Reed Timmer, PhD shows a grouping of potential paths as of Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, nearly all of which appear to be making a beeline for the Big Bend.
As the landfall approaches, some of what were called "spaghetti" models when the storm was further out begin to narrow and look much less spaghetti-like. They also hint at the capricious storm's final plan of attack. Crucially, a storm ends up charting a course outside of the forecast cone 1/3 of the time, according to NOAA.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The above maps, posted by Orlando meteorologist Noah Bergren, hint that Helene's eye may be turning slightly east, or may just be wobbling slightly off course before it returns to the cone — either is possible. Though, importantly, Bergren points out that the true "center of circulation" may well still be in the cone. The storm still appears to be headed toward the vicinity of the Big Bend, but it could also veer off the expected course, impacting — for instance — Gainesville more than previously expected.
So while forecasting maps are clues about the future, it's wise to follow NOAA's more general advice at times like this, particularly the part that says "Residents in [affected] areas should follow advice given by local officials and evacuate if told to do so."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
If you're looking for ways to help provide assistance in response to Hurricane Helene, visit the websites for organisations like Operation Airdrop.
New 'League of Legends' champion Camille revealedEverything you need to know about the new U.S. men's soccer head coachNow you can listen to Apple Music, watch Sony LIV movies in your next Ola cab ridePeople are dreading Thanksgiving now more than everEarth's mini moon could be a chunk of the big moon, scientists sayGay woman buys dinner for the homophobic family sitting next to herHotel's magical Christmas decor comes from Apple designersThe Smithsonian is acquiring the original Ice Bucket Challenge bucketHere's what Emma Watson thinks of 'Fantastic Beasts'How Black Lives Matter activists interrupted a popular treePeople are dreading Thanksgiving now more than everThe Smithsonian is acquiring the original Ice Bucket Challenge bucketGigi Hadid kind of apologizes for Melania impression at the AMAsRestaurant apologizes for accidentally hosting neoEverything you need to know about the new U.S. men's soccer head coachThe Fondoodler is the hot glue gun for cheese America deservesBeing sexist can be bad for a man's psychological health, tooTommy Hilfiger says designers should 'be proud' to dress Melania TrumpTrump supporters are pissed he won't pursue charges against Hillary ClintonKillfies: India tops the list of most selfie deaths again Chess and Madness by Yascha Mounk Elizabeth Warren and her very good dog Bailey joined the Washington D.C. protests Part 1: Nathaniel Rich’s Trousers by Clancy Martin Joe Dunthorne on ‘Submarine’ by Thomas Bunstead The 49ers, Kaepernick's last NFL team, criticized for Blackout Tuesday post Michael Azerrad on ‘Our Band Could Be Your Life’ by Dawn Chan And We Have A Winner! by Sadie Stein Making Art by Thessaly La Force Staff Picks: Lawrence of Tell Halaf, Raging Nymphos by The Paris Review Even Piers Morgan thinks Rudy Giuliani 'sounds completely barking mad' 'Evil Dead Rise' review: Plenty of gore in this horror sequel, but is that enough? It Never Gets Old by Louisa Thomas Imgur to remove explicit images and old content Here's how out of whack Earth's climate is today A Week in Culture: Tom Nissley, Writer and Game StableLM is the newest GPT How tech leaders can do more for racial justice than just tweet Every police department should have to hear our rage via Zoom call Win Two Tickets to Arcadia by Peter Conroy 'Yellowjackets': Whose body is being carried in the trailer?
4.1995s , 10137.2578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Boobwatch 1 (1996)】,Charm Information Network