Posted on 09/02/2021 1:36:42 PM PDT by blam
Once heard their is a rat for every person in the big cities. With all the flooding in Philly and NYC, I wonder where all the rats went. Really creeped me out even thinking about it.
Why get storm info regurgitated & 2nd hand from the ZULUs when you can go to the source.
I would also use Mikes Weather page b4 the Z’s
And only a few years ago they were Predicting New England would turn into a desert because of “Climate Change”.
The fascist grifters are shameless.
You have my permission to post what-ever JimRob allows.
BTW, he is the one who told me how to post articles from Zubu Brothers.
How many articles have you posted?
Here's my posting record:
You've posted a total of 18,113 threads and 95,902 replies.
Now, go away bossy little boy.
For many years, I have witnessed the spoken phrase from the high and mighty east coast: ‘Oh, Louisiana got hit with a hurricane. Please pass the poupon.”
So, as I sit here in Central Louisiana, and can say I lived in the NYC area, I see that y’all are having a problem with a little rain, and maybe a major hurricane coming.
“Please, another andouille?”
This is not the first hurricane remnant to go through this area, and it won’t be the last.
Climate Change my arse.
windy.com is forecasting landfall North of Newfoundland, CA.
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I hope you’re right - I’m sick of pumping out my basement...
The latest run of the U.S. “GFS” weather model shows Larry close to Bermuda (as a cat-4 hurricane) by next Thursday and then hitting southeast Newfoundland (the Avalon peninsula) as a strong low (possibly still a cat-1 hurricane) within a couple of days of that Bermuda pass. It ends up weakening rapidly south of Iceland and is just a garden variety low off the coast of Norway in about two weeks. But earlier there were suggestions it would take a sharper turn, miss Bermuda to the east and circle back around to northwest Africa, so the trends are towards the west and north.
Normally model runs that show this sequence stop moving closer to the east coast of the U.S. and about the furthest west that landfall might occur would be Nova Scotia rather than Newfoundland but you might keep an eye on developments if you live in New England. At the moment I would say less than a 10% chance of a U.S. landfall. These are the most powerful hurricanes, the “Cape Verde” full ocean transit types — the 1938 Long Island Express started out in the same general area.
People recovering from Ida could use a break.
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