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The Frankenstorm


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2022 Sep 28, 8:23am   1,702 views  47 comments

by Tenpoundbass   ➕follow (7)   💰tip   ignore  

This storm has slammed into a trough that is pulling it apart and throwing it's moisture and content all the way up the east coast. Yesterday before it slamed into the trough, it had the most perfect classic eyewall. Since about 8pm last night the storm has struggled to create an eyewall. In all my life watching hurricanes, I have never seen a storm get battered by a trough, and keep coming back, and I have never seen a 155mph storm with such a sloppy eyewall. The west side of the storm reaches up 20 to 30 thousand feet in the air, while the east side only goes about 10 thousand. It's a sloppy ill formed storm that has no business being there, and certainly has no business not being torn to shreds after slamming into that ridge of dry air.

No weather reporter has explained the dry vortex that just magically appeared behind it in the mid Atlantic keeping it pushed into that trough, so I can't retreat or go east and into the Atlantic storm graveyard.

This hurricane should have been called Frankenstorm, or DARPA's best work yet.

The GOES Disk 8 satellite looks like GOD and DARPA in a battle of Will.

May God prevail!

Does this look like a classic 155mph storm?
Since when do Storms lose their eyewall, but manage to stay 120mph for over 12 hours?
Since when does a Hurricane not get ripped to shreds and torn apart when it hit a trough?
When has a storm ever strengthened into a 150 mph storm right as it makes land fall with a battered eyewall?



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19   AmericanKulak   2022 Sep 28, 3:50pm  

Lakeland, about 45 minutes SW of me. The storm center is allegedly a few miles to the SW of that.

Some winds, some rain, no big whoop. I'm in a trailer, BTW.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhCUByPmdec
20   Tenpoundbass   2022 Sep 28, 3:58pm  

It was a strong Cat 1 when it made landfall. The backside had a few Cat 2 -3ish bands.
I like hearing the weather news talking heads, having to answer to the reports of 155mph sustained winds.
Those kind of winds have been very rare in this storm and were only quick bursts.
The meterologists were trying to explain that's what they meant, but yet it says "Sustained" right there in the description in the NOAA updates.
"155 mph max sustained winds."

What would be more helpful would be average sustained winds, which would be about 75mph.
Max sustained winds were 100mph
Wide spread down burst (micro tornado cells) that stripped some trees, but trees next door would be unharmed.
The flooding mostly were at the beach front street side parking. Basically every beach front community will flood like that on the ocean side of the intercoastal side in a storm like this. Where as the media tried to make it sound like a Katrina event where a wall 20 foot of water was pushed ten or fifteen miles inland. That did not happen. River banks, and ocean front only.
21   AmericanKulak   2022 Sep 28, 4:08pm  

They're claiming on Fox News Tampa it's down to a 3.

I doubt it was ever more than a 1 at the worst.

Never seen the media/agencies goof like this.

As you say, somebody is confused as to Sustained vs. Gusts, maybe they hired a BA "Science Education" bluehair to write up the data.
23   Tenpoundbass   2022 Sep 28, 4:20pm  

The only explanation is the grifting huxters on the West Coast of Florida are priming the Fema pump to pay out for a 155 mph storm catastrophe. Even if the eyeball evidence can't get past a Category 1. They'll justify the billions they get in FEMA with one image.
24   EBGuy   2022 Sep 28, 6:22pm  

Hurricane Ian you just made landfall. What are you doing next?
I'm going to Disneyworld...

25   Tenpoundbass   2022 Sep 28, 6:46pm  

EBGuy says

I'm going to Disneyworld...

They could use a FEMA bailout long about now.
26   AmericanKulak   2022 Sep 28, 10:59pm  

Whole thing is BS, it wasn't even a 4 at landfall.

By 10PM the sustained winds were 30mph and the biggest gust was recorded at 55mph.

They never lost the lights anywhere near downtown Tampa or Orlando. A few customers in small towns and rural areas.
27   Ceffer   2022 Sep 29, 12:58am  

It sounds like a fake news hurricane. No pics of Anderson Cooper pretending to be up to his neck in water?

LIve cam at The Villages shows some minor squall and heavy rain stuff.
28   Ceffer   2022 Sep 29, 1:30am  

You can watch the Shellenberger segment from cisTits *Schellenberger Kicks Libtard Ass Before Congress) in which some dumass insane and delusional LibbyFuck script readers promote the usual fallacies about energy.

The Global Warming canard requires more frequent and destructive hurricanes. If you have one piddler hurricane a year, it doesn't fit the narrative. So, Hurricane Ian could be simply jacked up by our predictable buddies at the captured MSM to fit the failing narrative?

"Ian, the good news is we are promoting you summarily to a 5!"

Thanks to our boots on the ground guys here at Patnet for confirming that it wasn't all that?
30   Ceffer   2022 Sep 29, 1:55am  

Ian had Sharknados!
32   zzyzzx   2022 Sep 29, 6:43am  

Invitation Homes has a significant holding in Tampa and the rest of Florida. Would be a shame if this storm affected their bottom line...
33   zzyzzx   2022 Sep 29, 6:55am  

"Still safer than Chicago!", someone said through a snorkel!
34   Tenpoundbass   2022 Sep 29, 9:50am  

zzyzzx says

About to buy a home in Florida? Property insurers pause new deals ahead of Hurricane Ian

When I held a mortgage on my house, Insurance companies used to like drop me just days before the Hurricane season.
The word was, that if you lose insurance during Hurricane season, then they wont write you a policy, or you'll pay three times the going rate.
So with just days, I would call around to find another insurance company. But Citizens was the only insurance company. Finally they would write me a policy for about 20% more than I was paying the year before. Because I was dropped by my previous company(That company of course being them!)
35   Tenpoundbass   2022 Sep 29, 5:34pm  

Here's an excellent example of Propaganda. It's very VERY important for this narrator to make you believe that the 3 to 4 foot of ocean front Ocean Surge, is a 10 to 20 foot city wide surge. Even while he's telling you that the surge was 10 foot, people are wading up to their knees.

See for yourself. Either except the piss on your leg or wipe off the rain.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVrCFmRVSPE
36   Booger   2022 Sep 29, 6:00pm  

What I don't understand is why so many people carelessly left their vehicles in areas prone to flooding.
39   Ceffer   2022 Sep 30, 3:04pm  

LOL! The neocon land pirates and name stealers behind DHS and FEMA are using disasters as pretenses to commit mass burglaries, heists, home invasions, thefts and surveillances. Mandate evacuations and coast is clear for the methodical plundering.

Would we expect anything less from agencies elevated by the 9/11 false flag edicts?
43   Tenpoundbass   2022 Sep 30, 8:50pm  

This was on the way over to Fort Myers Beach, just before the bridge to the pier. For about 2 miles all of the boats that were in the intercoastal on the North Side, were all on the South Side in the bramble and Cypress trees and mangroves. This was about a ten foot surge that must have lifted those big boats and put them there. The last picture was the side that those boats came from. Aside from that, and downtown Ft Myers by the river front, where boats in the marina before the bridge were tossed around as well. I didn't see any Hurricane Sustained wind damage. Aside from occasional down bursts that would have ripped a roof. All of the trees still had their tops.

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