waiting for dorian, day four

The path of Dorian through the Caribbean and on to Florida has been shifting further and further east. I woke up this morning to this forecast track, where Dorian is now projected to skirt Florida landfall and instead move up the coast and strike South Carolina around Charleston. Looking at the last two posts before this, the forecast map has had Dorian’s track moving eastward to today’s.

Do I feel safe? Is Florida out of the woods? No and no. Every forecast is made on an eight hour cadence. Every forecast has the hidden caveat that this is how the hurricane will travel if nothing changes from the point the forecast is made over the next five days. Everything is dynamic.

Historical path of Hurricane Irma

A classic example of unpredictability is Hurricane Irma from 2017. While the historical track doesn’t show it, during the latter stages before Irma finally hit Florida in the Keys, Irma had been forecast to miss Florida entirely and move into the Gulf. But Irma hit Florida and spent the next 48 hours basically chewing through the peninsula. Because the track was to the west of us, most of Florida suffered the worst of a hurricane, the north-east quadrant (upper right quadrant).

You never take a hurricane’s forecast for granted. Never. And Dorian will be no exception.

Update 31 August

Dorian is tracking even further east. If this track holds it would side-swipe the coast of North Carolina before heading out into the North Atlantic. I hope this trend of tracking further eastward continues.

preparing for dorian, day three – tree trimming


Today was another day of preparation. I had an arborist, A-1 Arborists (https://www.a1arboriststreesvcs.com/), come in and trim out all my trees, especially the big live oak that overhangs the house. The crown had grown too low and too close to the roof to suite me, and with Dorian approaching I wanted it lifted and cleared a bit. I had other trees in my yard trimmed as well, but the live oak was my chief concern. It has been growing in my yard for nearly 30 years and it’s survived every hurricane that’s passed through. I’d like to keep it around as long as possible.

I’d rather pay someone now to come and trim up my trees than have them come in after into a really big mess. Not only do I have a responsibility to keep everything as healthy as possible, I’m also concerned about damage to my neighbors. So I try to keep it all cleaned up as well as possible.

The crew that came in worked really hard and professionally. Thanks guys.