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So, one could look outside this morning and say all looks great for fishing. But, I'm being told that we will be shutting the gov't offices down within a couple hours due to risk of hurricane/tornado type weather. Just thinking to myself that I once was caught out on the lake when such weather came through without warning. One minute it was sunny and beautiful and then the next thing we had 50mph winds and thunderstorm that pushed boats into the shoreline.
today seems like it could be one of those days. Guess I'll go home and tie things down!
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I once got pummeled on the Wicomico River with my friend Jimmy. We saw it from a distance, tried to beat it and got nailed. That’s literally what it felt like.
Now, I am sitting at the Miami airport looking for a window to fly. We’ve already been delayed 2 hours. So much fun!![]()
Be safe all!!
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Sirens were blaring when my wife was in the gym this morning, and they were all evacuated to the basement.
I was on the river kayak fishing when a storm like this came up. Waited out the storm on the bank with my sit in kayak upside down on top of me. after the storm was over, fishing was nuts. My guess is the storm put allot of food in the water and it was feeding time.
Hope you're home now Ernie
Last edited by hookup (Mar-16-26 8:14PM)
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hookup wrote:
Hope you're home now Ernie
Finally landed a little before 8pm.
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From the Capital Weather Gang:
Why the storm forecast that scared D.C. fell short-
Monday brought one of the most ominous severe weather forecasts in years, including a rare Level 4 out of 5 risk for damaging winds and tornadoes.
Schools dismissed early and plans changed but while there were indeed many reports of severe weather (111 severe wind reports), some of the most feared impacts never materialized.
Here’s what happened:
• Limited storm fuel: Thick cloud cover held temperatures down, reducing the instability needed for widespread severe storms
• Early storms “used up?? energy: A late-morning line likely “stole the second round’s thunder??
• Downdrafts couldn’t get going: Moist air near the surface limited the ability for strong winds aloft to reach the ground
At the same time, the concern was justified. The setup had the ingredients for dangerous storms, and had those ingredients come together differently, the outcome could have been far worse.
But this event also highlights something important:
-We need to do a better job communicating uncertainty.
Severe storms are highly sensitive to small changes. Even with strong signals, they’re not guaranteed. That nuance didn’t come through clearly enough.
Forecasting severe weather remains one of meteorology’s hardest challenges — and this was a reminder that how we communicate risk is just as important as the forecast itself.
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