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09-01-2019 12:38 PM - edited 09-01-2019 12:40 PM
Hurricane Dorian's winds reach 180 mph as storm is expected to stall over Bahamas, forecasters say.
09-01-2019 12:47 PM
The northern Bahamas will be facing the strongest storm ever. These once-in-a-century storms are coming all too frequently. Climate change is taking weather to its worst. We have family and friends who live in central FL. I think they’ll be OK if forecasts hold. I also have friends in Wilmington, NC. I hope Dorian will weaken by the time it travels north.
09-01-2019 01:34 PM
From NBC
BREAKING: Category 5 Hurricane Dorian makes landfall in Bahamas with 185 mph winds |
Hurricane Dorian made landfall in the Bahamas Sunday afternoon, shortly after the Category 5 storm was deemed the strongest in the region in modern records. The extent of damage wasn’t immediately known. |
This is very scary!
09-01-2019 01:48 PM
It seems we will continue to have the "worst this or that of the century" mulitple times in a two-year period, give or take a year. This state of extreme nature is nothing less than harrowing.
Ellicott City, Md., had two thousand-year floods in the span of a couple years.
Ellicott City: Two '1000-Year Floods'?
09-03-2019 10:04 AM
CNN, LOL, I think I'd get my weather sources from the Weather Channel!!! CNN showed a map the other day with the projected hurricane that showed Alabama not even in the US, MS was next to GA, how stupid can you get!
09-03-2019 10:08 AM - edited 09-03-2019 10:08 AM
@Hooty wrote:CNN, LOL, I think I'd get my weather sources from the Weather Channel!!! CNN showed a map the other day with the projected hurricane that showed Alabama not even in the US, MS was next to GA, how stupid can you get!
@Hooty . How stupid can you get? Forget CNN, take a look at Twitter! LOL
09-03-2019 11:55 AM - edited 09-03-2019 11:57 AM
Hurricane Dorian weakens to Category 2, starts slow move toward Florida, Georgia, Carolinas
The National Hurricane Center's 11 a.m. update showed the hurricane has sustained wind of 110 miles an hour (that is the strongest sustained wind a hurricane can have without being classified as a Category 3 storm). The storm, which was listed as stationary for several hours, is now moving at two miles per hour.
While the wind speed decreased slightly, the size of the storm actually grew. NHC said the risk of life threatening storm surge and hurricane force wind continues to increase along the coast of North Carolina.
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