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Hurricane Irene Warning

By Ed Magicseaweed - Published on 23rd August 2011 | Viewed 30796 times.

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Two names on the lips of everyone at Quiksilver HQ at the moment, Hurricanes Irene and Katia.
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HURRICANE Irene makes a few waves as the Carolinas prepare to batten down the hatches.

Hurricane Irene -- keep checking your local warnings. That’s the best assessment of our first major Atlantic Hurricane of the season. We’re always aware when talking of this kind of storm of the importance of understanding their destructive nature when getting excited about the surfing potential, with Irene already wreaking havoc and a strong possibility of East Coast landfall after its destructive jaunt through the Caribbean, the main theme here has to be one of caution, but nonetheless we’re a surf forecasting site so lets break down the possibilities.

Right now the ‘most probable’ track for Hurricane Irene is increasingly northward moving through the Bahamas and tracking just offshore of the Florida coast before impacting North Carolina as a major hurricane on Sunday. However it’s worth understanding both the variability of different forecast used to create this consensus and the potential margin for error in the ‘most probable’ track. The GFS wind model we use to drive our surf forecasts shows a much more rapidly curving path moving the storm away from the coast with the centre passing 65 miles from Cape Hatteras, where the HWRF hurricane model shows impact with South Carolina. The NHC themselves publish error figures of an average 200-250 miles after 4-5 days. The bad news is where previous possible paths might have brushed the coast and storms have, in recent times, been kept away from land by dominant high pressure systems, in this case the likelihood is impact and only a small proportion of models suggest the storm taking a track avoiding all landfall.




So from a surfing perspective from Florida through to North Carolina for later in the week the outlook is for potentially damaging winds and large storm surf. There will be a fairly lengthy window before the storms arrival when smaller long period swell from the initial stages of the storm will be seen for most East coast breaks. From Tuesday night the hurricane models suggest small longer period swell in the waist to chest high range should start to show on the outer banks, smaller further south and arriving a little later further north. New Jersey potentially sees similar conditions on Wednesday but with increasingly strong southerly winds (not related to this storm) throwing a wind sea into the mix that’ll all but obscure the longer range stuff come Wednesday afternoon. Beyond this significant surf and winds are likely for potentially the entire East Coast, we’ll keep our detailed 5 day hurricane swell models updated here.
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Comments
 
Archived Comments
MSut08273 days ago +4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
It will be interesting to see how the surf breaks look while inside the 'eye of the storm.' It might be firing for a couple random hours on sunday in NJ...
i_wipeout_alot274 days ago +3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
I'm on the edge of my seat. I need updates every 30 seconds please.
sqirl275 days ago +9 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
what msw has completely missed on their forecast is the banjo model. you see it is a well known fact that hurricanes are attracted to banjos...what i am trying to say, ben...ed, is that you guys need a computer model that shows the known location of every banjo in the southeast! wherever that concentration is the strongest will determine the exact track the storm will take! the only reason the last couple hurricanes havent hit land is because the country music association has been putting charlie daniels and earl scruggs on a cruise ship to bermuda while they strum the dueling banjo song on the back deck......the hurricane follows them like a donkey following a carrot everytime!
sqirl275 days ago Unrated Rate Positive Rate Negative
dont believe me?....then i dare anyone from south florida to the outerbanks to play this youtube clip on full volume ...... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tqxzWdKKu8 .......
Coelacanth275 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Love that song...and that movie. Ironically(?)...Burt Reynolds('Louis' in that movie)has fallen on hard times lately(relatively speaking)...and his house here in Jupiter(Mel's neighborhood)is going through foreclosure procedings right now.
Dooap275 days ago Unrated Rate Positive Rate Negative
Thanks ben - like learning new things - such as storm tracking direction will affect wave size. I did not understand why that was until now!
i_wipeout_alot276 days ago +1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
How's it looking for New England? I'm seeing forecast of 24 feet seas. What is that going to realistically translate to on the beach?
Ben Freeston275 days ago +1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
The GFS model we use to power our swell forecast is currently showing the storm ploughing up the east coast and hitting you sometime sunday/monday - the 24ft seas you're seeing are because of this expectation. If this isn't the case (and as we've said above it may well not be) you could see the storm stall around NC and then you'd see significantly less swell, but that might actually be surfable. The thing to bear in mind is that 24ft is based on your being in the middle of a still Hurricane strength storm - so what it'll do on the beach is anyones guess but it won't look pretty. With these storms our confidence on longer range forecasting has to be very low so keep an eye on that forecast and we'll update here too.
jwebb4242275 days ago +3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
overhead to double overhead in places like 1st beach RI, and Narraganesett... Could be a washing machine depending on storm trac and wind, my advice is know your abilities and try not to push it especially sat evening into sunday
i_wipeout_alot275 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Here's to hoping. I haven't seen that sort of size since Bill.
I wipeout alot too273 days ago Unrated Rate Positive Rate Negative
awesome!
Kemack276 days ago +3 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Finally we may get something at least a choppy ocean! I can't stand this flat water for much longer (Florida).
SuperKook276 days ago +4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Come on Irene oh yeah come on Irene!
norfolk jake276 days ago +4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
any potential for it to send some swell uk/europes way?
Ben Freeston276 days ago +4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
As a rule Hurricanes themselves never do, we wait for the ex-tropical storm to hit the normal west/east track and re-intensify as a normal cold core storm which usually bashes straight into us with wind and weather as well as swell. There are exceptions, Hurricane Igor last year blasted Europe while still tropical. The thing to understand with Hurricanes is they're too small to have much fetch so they really only create significant surf in the direction they travel (because they continue to move over the waves they're creating adding more energy as they develop) so for a storm to make waves in Europe it needs to head east. With this storm the issue is it's westerly track and potential landfall in the US, there's almost no hint from the models that the storm will move eastwards at this stage.
bra_boyz_canada275 days ago +8 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
So...no.
spongefreak275 days ago -4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
To be completely accurate it is possible, if the hurricane does send a large swell in the direction of the UK and that swell encounters no interferance on it's journey then it will arrive, maybe 2ft @ 20s. Of course you'll need perfect wind conditions when it arrives as well so it really is a once in a lifetime event, unfortunately I remember one back in the late 80's so I guess I'm not going to see another....Damn!
Ed Magicseaweed275 days ago +2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Not quite, as per frequency UK/Europe get one or two hurricane swells (not hurricane hits) every year. They are rare but not that rare. I remember one in particular in 2006 or 2007 which maxed out every beach from Sennen to Croyde
Tony Chaney274 days ago +1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Ahahahahah. Nicley summed up! But anyways thanks Ben for answering the questions and thanks for the article!
Tony Chaney274 days ago -2 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
The above comment was supposed to go right under bra_boyz_canada...
SuperKook274 days ago -1 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
Looking at the latest track I would say that the UK will get some wave from good ole Irene, although she is making land fall around the US/ Canada border the reminants will spin out into the north atlantic giving waves for the tail end of next week.
muzzak202273 days ago +4 Rating Rate Positive Rate Negative
i think a load of windsurfers saild in that one at gwitian
 
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