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Every recorded landfalling hurricane in the U.S.

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by oragator1, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:24 AM.

  1. oragator1

    oragator1 Hurricane Hunter Premium Member

    23,290
    5,962
    3,513
    Apr 3, 2007
    What stands out here is that small stretch of LA that just seems to get blasted. And then of course the northeastern gulf. And over a third of SW FLA’s hits have come in the past 25 years.
    Stuff like this will eventually be used to do differential Hurricane, wind and flood insurance costs I would bet because people will start balking at what a true shared price looks like.

     
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  2. OklahomaGator

    OklahomaGator Jedi Administrator Moderator VIP Member

    124,010
    164,183
    116,973
    Apr 3, 2007
    The northeast coast of Florida from Daytona to Jacksonville looks pretty safe.
     
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  3. WarDamnGator

    WarDamnGator GC Hall of Fame

    10,850
    1,357
    1,718
    Apr 8, 2007
    That’s a cool Graphic… it’s interesting that prior to 2024, in the large area between where Charlie hit in 2004 and where Idalia hit in 2023, there had only been one named storm to hit (Gladys 1968) in the last 60+ years… that’s a lot of coast line to have no impacts in 56 years….
     
  4. gatorchamps0607

    gatorchamps0607 Always Rasta VIP Member

    51,800
    20,824
    14,263
    Aug 14, 2007
    Gallatin, TN
    I saw something on this a while back. I thought there was some type of scientific reason for it becuase its a crazy anamoly. Every where else its consistent but this large chunk almost nothing.

    upload_2024-12-18_11-31-49.png
     
  5. channingcrowderhungry

    channingcrowderhungry Premium Member

    9,222
    2,074
    3,013
    Apr 3, 2007
    Bottom of a pint glass
    Jacksonville is kind of in a divot on the East coast, and thus, the Gulf stream is about 75 miles off the coast. Much further than a place like Miami. This creates a little cool water barrier and shoots the hurricanes up the warmer waters.
     
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  6. dave_the_thinker

    dave_the_thinker VIP Member

    1,083
    428
    1,813
    Dec 1, 2019
    Milton, FL
    We have been very, very lucky over the past 75 years. Speaking as someone who has lost everything in a hurricane before and can put that aside to point out the unspeakable.

    The real "Big One" is Ft. Lauderdale. In the early half of the 20th century it was blasted over and over again. Since then, the whole city has become Venice. Every street east of Andrew's Avenue is within spitting distance of a canal. When a Cat 4 crosses Las Olas, it's going to be a physical and financial bloodbath. In the law of averages it should be getting hit every few years but it has been lucky.

    The runner-up "Big One" is the counterclockwise nature of Tampa Bay. I have seen firsthand what happens when a hurricane spinning counterclockwise packs up surge in a CC bay and then moves, releasing it. (Ivan in 2004, I live on Escambia Bay) It creates a tsunami. When I saw this happen, a bouy in the bay broke after recording a 60-foot wave of water and debris. We are talking about a complete inundation of Tampa across to Clearwater followed by a tsunami that is released across the bay, wiping Bradenton off the map.

    Andrew pales in comparison to these two inevitable scenarios.
     
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  7. Spurffelbow833

    Spurffelbow833 GC Hall of Fame

    9,624
    762
    1,293
    Jan 9, 2009
    I thought Matthew hit Daytona. I guess it didn't actually make landfall there.
     
  8. antny1

    antny1 GC Hall of Fame

    5,435
    2,835
    2,698
    Dec 3, 2019
    I've lived in that area since 83 with exception of a few years in between. We've had some pockets of significant flooding mostly from hurricanes that hit from the west. Overall we've been extremely safe from storms although given the damage from weakened eastbound storms as well as the flooding we did have, a direct hit from the east would wipe out the peninsula in volusia county and then some.
     
  9. WC53

    WC53 GC Hall of Fame

    4,977
    1,025
    2,088
    Oct 17, 2015
    Old City
    Stayed just far enough offshore to escape major impact going north.
    Insurance inspector said it was first hit (graze) in 100 years.
     
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  10. antny1

    antny1 GC Hall of Fame

    5,435
    2,835
    2,698
    Dec 3, 2019
    Daytona has been grazed a few times.