Hurricane Laura

RyanB

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Anybody in its path?
 
Up to Category 4 as of 1:00 PM. Very bad storm!


151358_5day_cone_no_line_and_wind.png
 
Current Lake Charles, LA TAF

KLCH 261740Z 2618/2718 08018G28KT 6SM SHRA VCTS SCT030CB BKN060
TEMPO 2618/2621 VRB30G45KT 2SM +SHRA BKN025
FM270000 09035G45KT 2SM +SHRA OVC015
FM270300 11050G70KT 1SM +SHRA OVC007
FM270600 10070G100KT 1/2SM +SHRA OVC007
FM271000 20035G60KT 2SM +SHRA OVC007
FM271500 20020G35KT P6SM VCSH OVC007
 
Here is a word I I have never seen in a NOAA bulletin:

KEY MESSAGES FOR HURRICANE LAURA
ADVISORY 27: 10AM CDT WED AUG 26, 2020

1. UNSURVIVABLE storm surge with large and destructive waves will cause catastrophic damage from Sea Rim State Park, TX to Intracoastal City, LA.

Emphasis is mine.

If that isn't a get-out-of-town-now notice.... Prayers for folks in the dangerous area...

-Skip
 
My sister Laura lives in Panama City. It looks like she is going to miss this one (or vice versa) but she caught the brunt of Michael 2 years ago and she started to panic when she saw the likely path a few days ago. I also have a good friend that used to work for me. She opened her own vet clinic last year in Lafayette La, which is just to the east of the projected landfall.

This could be devastating, especially in the midst of a pandemic.
 
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We're East of there and just started getting the rain bands. All of my wife's family live there though, some on the water, but they have all evacuated at this point, primarily to Texas.
 
This could be devastating,
This area is also the heart of the petrochemical industry and they've shut-in over 70% of the GOM crude/gas production due to the storm. Plus about 25-30% of the US refining capability is within Laura's cone of uncertainty. And depending on the damage offshore and onshore this may add to the existing shortages felt from the pandemic. What's sad is LCH has been going through a huge multi-billion dollar industrial expansion over the past decade and are/were just about to reap the benefits of that move. Most of the new stuff will be under 10 feet of water when this gets done. What's amazing is there are hurricane warnings all the way to Shreveport and TS Warnings into AR.
 
Just updated forecast to peaking at 150 mph sustained at landfall. I hope anyone affected here has been able to get out.
 
I live on Galveston Bay. We were in the bullseye till changes yesterday...eye wall will pass 60 or so miles to the East so on the good side and it’s a very compact wind field. Spent the last two days taking care of boats and house but as of now not even a drop of rain. Lake Charles and Cameron Parrish are going to get hammered...as well as the Golden Triangle.
 
Where’s everybody relocating this aircraft too that is in the path of the storm? How far away is “safe”?
 
Where’s everybody relocating this aircraft too that is in the path of the storm? How far away is “safe”?

You'd be surprised how many airplanes have arrived say in, Lake Charles. Strange aircraft always appear at airports in the path of a hurricane.
 
One of the historical METARs:

Location...........: KLCH
Day of month.......: 27
Time...............: 06:53 UTC
Wind...............: true direction = 110 degrees; speed = 85 knots with gusts of 115 knots
Visibility: 1/4 Statute Miles
Weather............: fog
Vertical visibility: 600 feet
Temperature........: 25 degrees Celsius
 
I saw somewhere that a altimeter reading was something like 28.08 somewhere in the path. I dont think I ever heard a storm called unsurvivable before. Hopefully people are safe.
 
Capital One Tower in downtown Lake Charles, should be good news for the glass guy in town.

signal-2020-08-27-134151.jpg
 
Chemical fire in Lake Charles. So next thing we are going to run out of pool chemicals.
 
Some airport pictures from Lake Charles (KLCH) and Sulphur (Southland Field KUXL).

Lake_Charles_Hangar.jpg
Lake_Charles_Hangar2.jpg
Sulphur_Airport.png
Sulphur_Airport2.png
Hurrican_Laura_Twin_Engine_Damage.png
 
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Some of those hangars look like they wouldn't survive anything classified as a hurricane, looks like match sticks.
 
Why are those planes not flown out of the path? Out of annual? Mechanical?

A tornado is one thing, as those pop-up suddenly. A hurricane though is known days in advance. Wouldn't it be cheaper than deductibles and pay-outs to fly them away beforehand? Or are we just seeing the ones that couldn't fly out of there?
 
Perhaps in some cases, planes that were for sale for an extended period at unrealistically high prices? -Skip
 
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