Sincere question: why does the media send reporters/meteorologists to cover hurricanes on-site, in the middle of rain and growing wind gusts?
I understand being on-site immediately after the event passes, but why are they sent out into the bad weather itself?
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In that regard it's a *lot* like Charlie was.That's how you know the shit's really hit the fan.
Yeah, and this escalated quickly. My rule of thumb when I lived in Florida was to shelter in place for a Cat 2 or less and evacuate for Cat 3 or more. This spun up from relatively weak to a monster so quickly that it would have caught me off-guard and probably unable to evacuate in time. I hope this doesn't end up being as ugly as I fear it will.
True.That's how you know the shit's really hit the fan.
Well at least they have a Governor with his head on straight, and not some tRumpian fool that pulls political stunts for the optics. They should be fine.
In all seriousness, good luck to the people of Florida, sounds like you are going to need it.
Death Santis and all Florida republicans should decline hurricane Ian aid and pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
Suggestion: let’s pause the dart throwing until the storm passes and we’ve helped everyone reach some level of safety.
Yeah and how has that worked out for us?
This feels like where I'm at.Can I ask what is particularly unusual about Ian that makes it this triple threat, as opposed to a normal hurricane? Not critiquing your writeup, but the media seems to over-dramatize at least 2 hurricanes/storms every year and so for me alert fatigue has really set in.
Is it the size (beyond just being a Cat 4, since that doesn't seem that abnormal)? Location of where it will make landfall? Unusual storm surge potential? Is it that the storm is so slow (which I believe is something climate change may be worsening)? And is this something that seems to be a more frequent trend for these storms? Thanks!
Sincere question: why does the media send reporters/meteorologists to cover hurricanes on-site, in the middle of rain and growing wind gusts?
I understand being on-site immediately after the event passes, but why are they sent out into the bad weather itself?
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There's decent debate on the topic:
the Case Against Sending TV Reporters Out in Hurricanes
In Defense of the TV Reporter Standing Outside During a Hurricane
Damn dude, read the room.
I’ve been looking at a lot of maps of the Florida Gulf Coast these last few days trying to get a better sense of where people are and how bad it is going to be since my in laws live in St. Pete’s. Fortunately it looks like their property is going to escape the worst of it (and they’ve evacuated), but man, Cape Coral is probably just going to be gone.
Off topic, but I fell down a bit of a rabbit hole looking at satellite maps of the Naples area. Locals probably know this story, but there’s a whole city-sized grid of roads just east of Naples clearly visible on aerial maps with a few hilarious Google street views available. Turns out it was a 90 square mile real estate scam/environmental disaster. These brothers in the 50’s mostly drained this huge chunk of the Everglades built a ton of (shitty) roads, sold off lots, and then just never built any houses. I guess I never realized how far back the history of Florida men went. Development/scam was called Golden Gate Estates, if anyone else is looking for a diversion.
Current track looks like no real impact to Tidewater. I'd go, honestly.This feels like where I'm at.Can I ask what is particularly unusual about Ian that makes it this triple threat, as opposed to a normal hurricane? Not critiquing your writeup, but the media seems to over-dramatize at least 2 hurricanes/storms every year and so for me alert fatigue has really set in.
Is it the size (beyond just being a Cat 4, since that doesn't seem that abnormal)? Location of where it will make landfall? Unusual storm surge potential? Is it that the storm is so slow (which I believe is something climate change may be worsening)? And is this something that seems to be a more frequent trend for these storms? Thanks!
In VA I was driving to work thru the downpours of "superstorm sandy"...it was wetter than normal and only mildly annoying when we were told corporate in DC was sent home we weren't until local power went out. Then I drove thru downpours going back home, but it was just a longer version of an afternoon thunderstorm.
I'm trying to decide if I should go visit some friends towards the Norfolk VA area this weekend or cancel plans we had made...and depending who you ask it may just be rainy or may be SHTF.
While I'm glad my parents built that Summer cabin in North Carolina, I'm no longer sure it's far enough away. Gonna go right over our house in Orlando and the cabin in NC.
I do like their chances in the Blue Mountains against what will likely by then be a tropical storm versus being in Orlando right now.
And people have called you out on your edgelord "antics" many, many times in the past.This is not a new room. We have been in this one many times.Damn dude, read the room.Yeah and how has that worked out for us?Suggestion: let’s pause the dart throwing until the storm passes and we’ve helped everyone reach some level of safety.Death Santis and all Florida republicans should decline hurricane Ian aid and pull themselves up by their bootstraps.Well at least they have a Governor with his head on straight, and not some tRumpian fool that pulls political stunts for the optics. They should be fine.
In all seriousness, good luck to the people of Florida, sounds like you are going to need it.
directly quoting from the article:As a forecaster you worry about three primary threats from hurricanes—strong winds, storm surge, and inland rainfall.
Well yes. But my question is, why is this particular hurricane somehow different in these threat assessments to the essentially yearly hits that Florida takes? Why would the storm surge be worse? Why would the rainfall be worse?
Why is this particular storm exceptional, and of particular interest to me is whether these exceptions are part of any evolving patterns, or just freak bad luck? Because meteorologists have started calling "once in a several-century storms" EVERY YEAR for like the last half decade. So either their models aren't very good at statistics (unlikely) or something not included in standard models is changing, and so what (specifically, not just generically global warming) is changing about these storms that is making this the new normal?
Florida real estate scams date back far enough to have been reliable fodder for punch lines in Marx Brothers movies.I’ve been looking at a lot of maps of the Florida Gulf Coast these last few days trying to get a better sense of where people are and how bad it is going to be since my in laws live in St. Pete’s. Fortunately it looks like their property is going to escape the worst of it (and they’ve evacuated), but man, Cape Coral is probably just going to be gone.
Off topic, but I fell down a bit of a rabbit hole looking at satellite maps of the Naples area. Locals probably know this story, but there’s a whole city-sized grid of roads just east of Naples clearly visible on aerial maps with a few hilarious Google street views available. Turns out it was a 90 square mile real estate scam/environmental disaster. These brothers in the 50’s mostly drained this huge chunk of the Everglades built a ton of (shitty) roads, sold off lots, and then just never built any houses. I guess I never realized how far back the history of Florida men went. Development/scam was called Golden Gate Estates, if anyone else is looking for a diversion.
So because less than half the voters in FL voted for Trump, everyone in FL deserves to get hit with a Cat 4 hurricane?As for Florida, I dislike their Governor and his BS tactics but I don't wish those in Ian's path any harm. I just wonder how we could capture all that wind energy and water to use elsewhere...
And yet these people are why we have Desantis.. They're why we had Trump, they're why we had Bush..
While I'm glad my parents built that Summer cabin in North Carolina, I'm no longer sure it's far enough away. Gonna go right over our house in Orlando and the cabin in NC.
I do like their chances in the Blue Mountains against what will likely by then be a tropical storm versus being in Orlando right now.
If it's in the Blue Ridge mountains you probably just have to worry about some heavy rain. That's pretty far west into NC. That can still be very dangerous, particularly if you're in a flood prone area, but it's doubtful it would get hit by even tropical storm level winds.
I've sailed through the ICW in Florida's panhandle. Places like Panama City and Destin are still recovering from Hurricane Michale in 2018.
I suspect that this will create much the same level of destruction in the Fort Myers area, which is a shame because it is beautiful, historic, and full of nice, friendly people.
That is basically how Cape Coral came to exist.I’ve been looking at a lot of maps of the Florida Gulf Coast these last few days trying to get a better sense of where people are and how bad it is going to be since my in laws live in St. Pete’s. Fortunately it looks like their property is going to escape the worst of it (and they’ve evacuated), but man, Cape Coral is probably just going to be gone.
Off topic, but I fell down a bit of a rabbit hole looking at satellite maps of the Naples area. Locals probably know this story, but there’s a whole city-sized grid of roads just east of Naples clearly visible on aerial maps with a few hilarious Google street views available. Turns out it was a 90 square mile real estate scam/environmental disaster. These brothers in the 50’s mostly drained this huge chunk of the Everglades built a ton of (shitty) roads, sold off lots, and then just never built any houses. I guess I never realized how far back the history of Florida men went. Development/scam was called Golden Gate Estates, if anyone else is looking for a diversion.
I lived in Orlando when Hurricane Charley hit Florida in 2004. That hurricane had a track similar to Ian's. Like Ian seems to be doing, Charley unexpectedly veered east toward Charlotte County and made landfall at Category 3 or 4. If I still lived in Florida, I absolutely would have planned on Ian veering east--not for meteorological reasons but out of experience. Even the much-weakened Charley that hit Orlando caused a lot of damage.
I like Florida, but I'm glad I no longer live so close to a coastline.
As a veteran of more than a dozen of these awful things: not a fucking chance. I'm the first one evacuating when a hurricane heads toward H-town. And I'm counting the minutes until i can move away from the gulf coast and never come back.Hey Lee: Next time we want a live report from you or Berger…on-site.
I live in houston and spacecityweather.com has been my goto resource for weather for years. I have also been reading Ars for years.
I just finally put two and two together about the author, it is kind of embarrassing.
Off topic, but I fell down a bit of a rabbit hole looking at satellite maps of the Naples area. Locals probably know this story, but there’s a whole city-sized grid of roads just east of Naples clearly visible on aerial maps with a few hilarious Google street views available. Turns out it was a 90 square mile real estate scam/environmental disaster. These brothers in the 50’s mostly drained this huge chunk of the Everglades built a ton of (shitty) roads, sold off lots, and then just never built any houses. I guess I never realized how far back the history of Florida men went. Development/scam was called Golden Gate Estates, if anyone else is looking for a diversion.
You want your noodle really baked? I run the Space City Weather backend.I live in houston and spacecityweather.com has been my goto resource for weather for years. I have also been reading Ars for years.
I just finally put two and two together about the author, it is kind of embarrassing.
...And some of them are drama queens, who are nowhere near the real danger of the storm.Sincere question: why does the media send reporters/meteorologists to cover hurricanes on-site, in the middle of rain and growing wind gusts?
I understand being on-site immediately after the event passes, but why are they sent out into the bad weather itself?
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Nerds are gonna nerd, and these are weather nerds.
Well....it was less than half of the voters. What is the saying? For evil to triumph it only needs "good" men to do nothing....So because less than half the voters in FL voted for Trump, everyone in FL deserves to get hit with a Cat 4 hurricane?As for Florida, I dislike their Governor and his BS tactics but I don't wish those in Ian's path any harm. I just wonder how we could capture all that wind energy and water to use elsewhere...
And yet these people are why we have Desantis.. They're why we had Trump, they're why we had Bush..
Perhaps you can expand on this a little more? What are your criteria for who deserves to die and who does not?
directly quoting from the article:As a forecaster you worry about three primary threats from hurricanes—strong winds, storm surge, and inland rainfall.
Well yes. But my question is, why is this particular hurricane somehow different in these threat assessments to the essentially yearly hits that Florida takes? Why would the storm surge be worse? Why would the rainfall be worse?
Why is this particular storm exceptional, and of particular interest to me is whether these exceptions are part of any evolving patterns, or just freak bad luck? Because meteorologists have started calling "once in a several-century storms" EVERY YEAR for like the last half decade. So either their models aren't very good at statistics (unlikely) or something not included in standard models is changing, and so what (specifically, not just generically global warming) is changing about these storms that is making this the new normal?
In no particular order: the rainfall is going to be worse because the storm lacks steering currents, so rather than zipping through, it's going to do a mini-Harvey and move very slowly along its track. The slower it moves, the more rainfall it dumps.
Storm surge is driven primarily by wind, and geography plays a role. Tropical cyclones rotate counterclockwise, and so they have a "good side" and a "bad side"—the part that sweeps in from the water drags more surge in with it. With Ian, the "bad side" is the southern-ish side of the storm, as the counterclockwise circulation pulls water along over land. The area with the 12-16ft forecasted surge is on the "bad side" and is the recipient of bad luck and strong winds.
The cyclone's winds themselves are a function of lots of things, including how much wind shear exists along the thing's path, because wind shear helps slow down cyclone organization. But the major factor that drives the winds is the heat of the water, and the gulf in September is basically the temperature of a warm bathtub. This can help trigger an effect called rapid intensification, which is IIRC what Ian has gone through.
So, the rainfall/wind/storm surge factors are interlinked, but require lots of bad luck to all be severe at the same time. In most cases, either there's an intensity falloff in winds that damps down the surge as the thing tracks toward land, or the track itself turns out to be aimed such that the nearest population centers aren't on the "bad" side of the storm.
And, finally, yes, climate change is contributing to the increasing intensity of tropical cyclones.
...And some of them are drama queens, who are nowhere near the real danger of the storm.Sincere question: why does the media send reporters/meteorologists to cover hurricanes on-site, in the middle of rain and growing wind gusts?
I understand being on-site immediately after the event passes, but why are they sent out into the bad weather itself?
![]()
Nerds are gonna nerd, and these are weather nerds.
If you search, you can find plenty of footage of those people staggering around as if the wind will blow them away at any moment, while people in the background walk around casually.
Of course, some are weather nerds as you say.
Hmm, I wonder if anyone's ever worked out a way to judge the actual windspeed in a video based on the types of debris blowing past?
directly quoting from the article:As a forecaster you worry about three primary threats from hurricanes—strong winds, storm surge, and inland rainfall.
Well yes. But my question is, why is this particular hurricane somehow different in these threat assessments to the essentially yearly hits that Florida takes? Why would the storm surge be worse? Why would the rainfall be worse?
Why is this particular storm exceptional, and of particular interest to me is whether these exceptions are part of any evolving patterns, or just freak bad luck? Because meteorologists have started calling "once in a several-century storms" EVERY YEAR for like the last half decade. So either their models aren't very good at statistics (unlikely) or something not included in standard models is changing, and so what (specifically, not just generically global warming) is changing about these storms that is making this the new normal?
Sincere question: why does the media send reporters/meteorologists to cover hurricanes on-site, in the middle of rain and growing wind gusts?
I understand being on-site immediately after the event passes, but why are they sent out into the bad weather itself?
![]()
Nerds are gonna nerd, and these are weather nerds.
I don’t want to be nit-picky, but Ivan was 2004. I remember vividly. Our business opening in Pensacola was delayed by almost a year by damage and flooding from Ivan. Blue roofs everywhere. Contractors were swamped with work. I drove across that accursed temporary Escambia Bay bridge more times than I want to remember.I lived in Orlando when Hurricane Charley hit Florida in 2004. That hurricane had a track similar to Ian's. Like Ian seems to be doing, Charley unexpectedly veered east toward Charlotte County and made landfall at Category 3 or 4. If I still lived in Florida, I absolutely would have planned on Ian veering east--not for meteorological reasons but out of experience. Even the much-weakened Charley that hit Orlando caused a lot of damage.
I like Florida, but I'm glad I no longer live so close to a coastline.
Glad to see you corrected the 2014 typo. I remember the Year of Four Hurricanes well, because I was also in Orlando for Charley, and then was down in Lakeland for Frances, Jeanne, and Crazy Ivan. That season was bad enough that I didn't have to look up any of the storm names or spellings, because they are that entrenched in my mind. My parents were among the many Central Floridians re-roofing after Charley, and my college had to shut down for a week mid-semester waiting for power to be restored to the campus.
Sincere question: why does the media send reporters/meteorologists to cover hurricanes on-site, in the middle of rain and growing wind gusts?
I understand being on-site immediately after the event passes, but why are they sent out into the bad weather itself?
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