Severe Weather outbreaks

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Does anyone have an actual live feed of the storm? All the ones I've been following have been one by one been taken down by the storm.
 
Does anyone have an actual live feed of the storm? All the ones I've been following have been one by one been taken down by the storm.
I know it's hours later, but I've been tuned into the multi-camera coverage from See Jamaica. Every now and then a cam goes out, but there's always something going on at least.
 
So it looks like she's pretty well past Jamaica now and about to cross Santiago de Cuba. If I'm reading things correctly Melissa was at 892 hPa with 160 kt winds as she came ashore so she kept up the steam, then started dropping off as she moved across. Definitely shifted west a bit, saving them from a direct crossing. Only looks to be losing that steam as it crosses the Caribbean, the happening looks to be winding down.

Now to wait for services to be restored so we can see what went down in the hardest hit areas.
 
To answer the question on everyone's mind once they heard a hurricane hit Jamaica: Hedonism 2 is okay!!


Now we know why Hedo 2 is built in the safety of Negril Cove, where a hurricane would have to have a very unusual track to cause storm surge. It’s almost guaranteed to get a glancing blow no matter how powerful the storm.

It’s because Hedo 1 was built on Portland Point and was washed away by Hurricane Balldo back in 1967.
 
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Melissa never really redeveloped much over the open water. Looks like Cuba's gonna be hit with a lower-end Cat 3, which is "ride it out" territory in most of the Caribbean.
 
@#FF0000 Since you were wondering, it did not!
Melissa never really redeveloped much over the open water. Looks like Cuba's gonna be hit with a lower-end Cat 3, which is "ride it out" territory in most of the Caribbean.
That's great news, all things considering. I'm pleased.
 
It looked quite impressive visually speaking, but in terms of intensity it didn't really recover. That's nice though
I get you. I was wondering if the ocean would strength it but since the water probably cooled off with the hurricane stalling and absorbing that energy around that area (since it rained for like 3 days before ramming into Jamaica), it didn't have much warm water to get that energy back up - it took it away and cooled it off already. Mountains helped fortunately. As soon as a hurricane hits land it's strenght generally wanes within an hour or two, even if the land is relatively small.
 
Did you know there have been hurricanes that've hit the Sonora desert? Rare, but it does happen. They come up the Baja on the inside and hop the mountains. Not much left of 'em by the time they get there, but still it's kind of an interesting factoid, I thought.

Anyway the traffic cams and so on I've seen show that Jamaica did not nationally lose power, nor was it as wiped out as I was really afraid it would be.

Now that I live in FL I've gotta start keeping up on these things, I didn't really know about this one until they started talking about it hitting Jamaica and I was sure scared it would keep trucking north across Cuba and into Florida.
 
Now that I live in FL I've gotta start keeping up on these things, I didn't really know about this one until they started talking about it hitting Jamaica and I was sure scared it would keep trucking north across Cuba and into Florida.
It's pretty useless to pay attention to hurricanes in Florida until about a week before it might hit. It can do anything even hours before it's predicted to hit. The key is preparation, not reaction. Shutters for older windows, tarps for older roofs, a generator if you need one, fuel, clean water and shelf stable food, etc. The only thing you can reasonably do if a real storm is gonna hit is figure out where you're going to shelter, if you're in a flood zone, or if you should just get out of town.

At least, that's how white people should treat hurricanes in Florida. If you're in a black part of the state, you just do nothing until the day before and then go walk around in flooded streets so you get shocked to death by downed wires, I guess.
 
Now that I live in FL I've gotta start keeping up on these things, I didn't really know about this one until they started talking about it hitting Jamaica and I was sure scared it would keep trucking north across Cuba and into Florida.
Prepare at the beginning of hurricane season. Shelf stable food, water, batteries, charcoal for a grill to use up meat. This way the days before a storm can be spent shoring up your home, and not at the grocery store or Home Depot with the other idiots who didn't prepare. Use it up over the winter and spring, and then buy fresh in June. Know your evacuation zone, and where you'll go if ordered to evacuate. You don't need to go far, just inland enough to be outside of the evac zones. If you can, the home of a friend or family member is better, you don't want to be depending on a hotel, you don't want to go to a shelter if you can help it, and you really don't want to be stuck on 75 or 95 trying to get out of the state.
 
I’m not surprised the death toll was relatively low. The island got lucky with the track. Once I saw it was going to miss Kingston and Montego Bay I knew the death toll might not even go over 100. Kingston didn’t even lose power.
A lot of crops were probably destroyed. The agriculture sector is probably fucked but Jamaica is allegedly going to get a $150 million dollar catastrophe bond payout. It’s like insurance money that has better backing and arrives faster. But also Jamaica is corrupt as hell and idk if the money is actually going go to people who lost everything or if it’s going to be stolen. Probably stolen.

It’s not going to collapse the country because the tourism sector accounts for most of the GDP and the resorts are all fine.

Seems like Haiti may have somehow fared worse and they didn’t even get hit lmao.
 
Reporters have finally made it too the landfall zone. The entire coast is destroyed. Including the forests. But for the grace of God this could have been Kingston. Cold comfort for Black River though


Black River, Jamaica —
Once described as a tropical paradise, the coastal town of Black River, Jamaica, is now being compared to “hell on Earth” after being ravaged by Hurricane Melissa.

Many of the town’s colorful homes, historical buildings and lush greenery have been reduced to piles of rubble that litter the now-muddy ground.

“We have nowhere to stay,” Britney Samms, a resident of Black River’s Vineyard District, told CNN.

Black River was one of the worst-hit places in all of Jamaica. A storm surge of up to 16 feet flooded parts of the community as the hurricane barreled through. At least two people died here – their bodies discovered floating in the water after the storm had cleared, St. Elizabeth Police Superintendent Coleridge Minto said Wednesday.

Hundreds of survivors are now walking through the streets in shock, trying to process the harrowing situation they face.

Many have lost their homes and are wondering where they will go for shelter.

We live in a board house. Everything is gone – dressers, stove – everything is gone,” Samms said, sitting beside other residents next to shopping carts loaded with their remaining belongings.

It was “a nice, quiet, very docile town,” said a man from a nearby town after surveying the devastation. Now it’s a “hell on Earth,” he said.

The town’s narrow roads are now cluttered with metal roof panels, slabs of concrete, and all kinds of trash that the water brought in.

Agonizing screams often echo through the town as residents walk around in circles, searching for loved ones or taking stock of the damage.


The heat and humidity are adding another layer of complexity to the recovery efforts. There is a makeshift camp of people who rode out the storm, but nothing remains standing.


Mayor Richard Solomon described the conditions as devastating. “Catastrophic is a mild term based on what we are observing here,” he said.

Adding to the devastation, Solomon said the storm “wiped out” the town’s relief supplies and rendered emergency vehicles inoperable due to water damage. This delayed the authorities’ ability to deliver much-needed aid.

Dozens of residents were seen clearing out the shelves of a damaged supermarket out of desperation, taking basic needs such as food and water.

as the hurricane barreled through. At least two people died here – their bodies discovered floating in the water after the storm had cleared, St. Elizabeth Police Superintendent Coleridge Minto said Wednesday.


There’s no looting,” a resident said to CNN. “This is trying to survive. It’s a survival thing right now.” He said the police were also at the scene – not to deter them but to help.

Getting aid from the outside has been a challenge as many roads remain blocked by debris, downed trees and floodwaters.

Emergency crews and defense forces are gradually arriving to help where they can. But that help can’t arrive soon enough, residents say.

“I need a shelter also, and I need food for my kids, I need clothes for my kids,” said a woman who identified herself as Anyaleepy. “And not only for me, but everybody who can come and help us. Jamaica really needs your help. We’re dying out here.”
 
The Northern Tornado Project, the team that surveys Canadian tornadoes and assisted with the Enderlin EF5 survey, is investigating a tornado in Alberta from last year (July 2024) that may have had damage consistent with EF4-EF5 windspeeds.
The twist? This was a fucking fire tornado.
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This was also apparently a forecasted sounding from east of the area around that time, which would be sufficient for strong tornadoes to occur.
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The previous strongest fire tornado was an EF3 in California in 2018 (Carr Fire Tornado). This may skip EF4 and go all the way to EF5.
 
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