I went to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA’s own , Historical Hurricane Tracks website
This is a very useful, interactive interface. Type in a hurricane name, a location, etc. and see historical tracks of over 13,000 storms. They show complete track, dates, strength of storm at each phase, etc.
Interesting things I found.
Although Helene was a tropical storm at that point, sitting over Asheville, it is very rare for a Hurricane to make it that far, let alone dump that much water.
I found NO storms that went from Mexico, tracked East across the Gulf, to Florida.
I found NO storms that park in one spot, like we’ve seen in Houston and the Bahamas.
Even the Tropical Storm that parked over Interstate 95 in South Carolina was VERY ODD.
Prior to the last 10 years or so, most, if not all storms behaved very predictably, including Katrina.
Weather manipulation is more difficult to deny.
Ssshhhh! That will be the next website (after the Wayback Machine) to be hacked. Remember, they're using 1984 as a road map.
And to think I got banned for this. I feel vindicated😁!
Yeah, the mods likely gave up after so many posts. I looked at one of the mods post history and it was just post removed notices for a while
Didnt they dump water out of dams during the storm? And if so, how much of the devastating water was from that?
You had to ensure the dams integrity. I wouldn't want to have made that call.
Me neither, but an intentional release can be just as devastating as a collapse
I know one dam in East Tennessee burst. Got a family member that wasn’t 15 miles from it. Places flooded, no doubt, but the rivers handled much of it.
I thought I read somewhere that they were going to open up the dams before the storm hit. So, I thought is what happened.
And that could be the case. I personally haven’t heard from anyone else that a dam has broke or was damaged in that area. Just passing on what I’ve heard. But honestly it may have just been opened, as you said.
Thanks for your insights!
I'm sure it was as much as they could muster.
I saw a post the other day wondering the same question. 14 storms in 175 years have started in Mexico and came back to FLA. but watching the storm last night and moving it on future cast on my weather app made things even weirder. Now seeing how fast it disappeared and made it through FL after seemingly moving super slow.
It was weird too as I live in Missouri, clearly way removed from the storm path, and we received the normal rain but what wasn't normal was the gusty winds. Strange. 🤔
While I am absolutely positive that weather manipulation happens via haarp, nexrad and other tech, we also have to remember the BP oil spill literally changed the ocean current in the gulf and could be contributing to the change in hurricane performance. Prior to the BP spill there was a gulf conveyor which cam up the coast of South and Central America, made a loop in the gulf then continued up the east coast. Since the spill that loop doesn't exist anymore, the conveyor bypasses the gulf and just goes straight up the coast.
I would be careful with just flat out saying it's weather manipulation.
That said, the dissipation of Milton as compared to the n Carolina hurricane is extremely odd so who knows...
It move faster to that area than any other storm front. Carried all that extra water. The clouds are almost ocean.like in their density. Cloids hit the Appalachians and booboo near biblical flooding.
I wonder if Hunga Tonga undersea volcanic eruption had anything to do with these massive amounts of water. https://www.nasa.gov/earth/tonga-eruption-blasted-unprecedented-amount-of-water-into-stratosphere/
Makes me wonder what “Normal” weather is like. We are 10-15 degrees warmer than normal for this time of year and no rain in about 6 weeks. Many areas dry and hot. Are the hurricanes sucking up all the cool wetness?
Two days ago I looked at a satellite image of the USA.
The entire country was ringed by clouds but nary a blip inside our borders.
Dry where I'm at as well.