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Hurricane Sandy Path

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Sandy Still on Track to Strike New Jersey on Monday Evening

The massive, slow-moving storm will likely hit New Jersey Monday evening in earnest, although it may not be hurricane by then.

Hurricane Sandy is still packing 75 mph winds as a Category 1 storm on Sunday morning. The massive storm was located 395 miles east of Charleston, SC, at 5 a.m. Oct. 28 and was traveling northeast at 13 mph over the open water of the Atlantic Ocean parallel to the East Coast. Forecasters still expect the system to take a sharp left turn early on Monday morning and approach the New Jersey coastline by Monday night as a large and powerful storm with winds of near-hurricane force (74 mph). At that point, Sandy is not expected to be categorized as a hurricane, despite her widespread and powerful effects. Follow Sandy's path as it heads toward South Jersey with this interactive map. The National Weather Service predicts a storm surge of 4 to 8 …

Joseph Elfelt

12:12 pm on Sunday, October 28, 2012

Thanks for including the interactive map link in the article. I am the developer of the Gmap4 browser app that is displaying the data file prepared by NOAA. The map link you included shows the likelihood in percent that the wind will reach or exceed 34 knots (39 mph). Below are two additional map links showing the probability in percent that the wind will reach two higher speeds. Likelihood in …   more ›

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Christie on Hurricane Sandy: 'I Feel Like the Disaster Governor'

Governor issues state of emergency in advance of storm, says state well-prepared after past severe weather events.

Gov. Chris Christie has a message for New Jersey residents doubting the severity of the Hurricane Sandy forecast: prepare for the worst. The governor declared a weather-related state of emergency before holding a press conference in front of the East Keansburg Fire Company in North Middletown on Saturday morning.  “We should not assume the predictions should be wrong,” Christie said “When the storm comes, if it’s as bad as they're predicting it will be, you’re going to wish you weren’t as cynical as you might have otherwise been. I’m not trying to be an alarmist here. I want everybody to be ready. I want your families to be safe and I want us to be able to do our jobs the right way.” Christie ordered the mandatory evacuation of Barrier …

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chris

5:08 pm on Saturday, October 27, 2012

Internet grammer nazi's are cool   more ›

Friday, October 26, 2012

Glouco Prepares for Sandy; WD High to Be Emergency Shelter

Gloucester County's preparations for Hurricane Sandy include sandbags and preparing West Deptford High School as an emergency shelter.

Gloucester County submitted the following release: Gloucester County has implemented preparation for Hurricane Sandy, anticipated to make landfall on Tuesday morning. Freeholder Director Robert Damminger said that Gloucester County has deployed the sandbag machine to Greenwich Township this morning to preposition it for use along the Delaware River. Sandbagging operations have already begun with 1000 sandbags being filled now and placed tomorrow in Greenwich Township. The county is also coordinating with Greenwich for emergency pumps at Floodgate Road.  The county engineer has requested that dam owners begin lowering their respective lakes in anticipation of heavy rainfall. The American Red Cross is preparing for shelter operations at West…

stormcamper

8:49 am on Saturday, October 27, 2012

If the high school is a county shelter for all of gloucester county and the town of wd isn't hit hard but other parts of the county are, where do the kids go to school if there is a 1,000 people camped out in it? Just doesn't make sense to me when there are dozens of Fire companies in Gloucester County many of them listed as emergency shelters with the Red Cross. And the high school be next to a …   more ›

Explainer: What Is This 'Frankenstorm' Headed Toward NJ?

Already deadly, Hurricane Sandy could be the worst storm to hit the Northeast U.S. in 100 years, experts say.

Weather, government and media folks have dubbed Hurricane Sandy a “Frankenstorm” due to the convergence of extreme weather factors. Forecasters began buzzing days ago, when one of the world's three top computer-model weather simulations showed Sandy getting mixed up with a storm from the Midwest, a high-pressure system out of Greenland and a dip in the jet stream—turning it into a combination cyclone/nor'easter and pushing it toward land. As Andrew Freedman, of Climate Central wrote Monday, "Think if a hurricane and nor'easter mated, possibly spawning a very rare and powerful hybrid storm, slamming into the Boston-to-Washington corridor early next week, with rain, inland snow, damaging winds and potential storm surge flooding." But …

Thursday, October 25, 2012

National Weather Service: Major Storm Likely from Hurricane Sandy

The entire state of New Jersey could be severely impacted from Hurricane Sandy, meteorologists say.

Over the past 24 hours, the likelihood of a “very dangerous autumn storm system” next week has increased, according to a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Mt. Holly. This would affect the entire state, including Gloucester County and West Deptford. Hurricane Sandy already ripped through Jamaica and is currently bearing down on Cuba. Although there is still some uncertainty whether Sandy is headed this way, Mitchell Gaines, NWS meteorologist, said the potential for a storm has risen. “There could be strong, damaging winds, heavy rainfall with streams and rivers flooding and coastal flooding as well,” Gaines said. The timetable for any impact from Hurricane Sandy turning into a potential nor’easter, Gaines said, would be …

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