As Hurricane Matthew heads toward the southeastern United States, South Florida continues to hold its breath, hoping the core of the now Category 3 hurricane stays offshore.
However, there is one model, which many meteorologists say is highly unlikely, that projects the large storm to glide up along Florida’s coast and then swoop back around for a second blow.
Wow!. GFS Model showing the path of #HurricaneMatthew doing a giant loop possibly affecting Florida twice. Euro...nearly same idea. pic.twitter.com/ed08Bx9d6F
— Curt Kaplan (@Curtkap) October 5, 2016
It’s bizarre, disgusting, and horrifying. Again, take it with a grain of salt but, wow, that’s weird. If you’re looking for a good local follow for the latest on Hurricane Matthew check out John Morales of NBC 6, a non-alarmist who gives it to you straight.
Timing of potential onset of tropical storm force winds (for planning purposes) via @NWSMiami. pic.twitter.com/UAfJn0gKuT
— John Morales (@JohnMoralesNBC6) October 5, 2016
Be safe out there.
Well look at that!!! New run of the #American #GFS says "hey #Euro, you were on to something earlier". #HurricaneMatthew Loop-de-loop! pic.twitter.com/QCyV6bLol1
— Mike Thomas (@MikeTFox5) October 5, 2016
This morning's run of GFS US weather model has #HurricaneMatthew doing a bizarre loop off Florida coast! Detail likely to change... pic.twitter.com/tBb5kIKt6P
— Liam Dutton (@liamdutton) October 5, 2016
Here is a look at the GFS and Euro models...this is what we mean when we say model guidance is in disagreement. #HurricaneMatthew pic.twitter.com/CHDegXNyxx
— Molly Cochran (@ABC7Molly) October 4, 2016
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