Record Hurricane Irma Path: Turks and Caicos Then Near Miami And North
Thursday September 6 Hurricane Irma winds this morning were down a little to 180 mph. It now holds the record for 42 hours at or above that speed and is
Thursday September 6 Hurricane Irma winds this morning were down a little to 180 mph. It now holds the record for 42 hours at or above that speed and is
Wednesday September 6 Today Hurricane Irma set a record in the Atlantic basin maintaining winds of 185 mph for 24 hours. It beat Hurricane Allen from 1980 that was stronger
5 PM Wednesday September 6 Hurricane Irma is rolling north of the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico holding wind speed of 185 mph. The close up satellite video below is
Wednesday September 6 Hurricane Irma has been holding peak winds of 185 mph for nearly a full day. The satellite video below shows the contrast of danger and beauty of
Wednesday September 6 Two main things to point out this morning: The cold front is stalled over our region and we will have more rain today as temperatures struggle in
Tuesday September 5 Do you remember when I when I wrote about Hurricane Irma over the weekend and showed High Pressure off of New England that would play a role
Tuesday September 5 Hurricane Irma has winds of 185 mph winds making it the 5th strongest storm on record in the Atlantic. It is a Category 5 system, and joined
11 AM Tuesday September 5 Hurricane Irma has reached a level that less than 1% of systems achieve. The latest air force reconnaissance shows that this storm has winds of
Tuesday September 5 Today is the day Maryland goes back to school and it will feel like one last day of summer. Temperatures are warm this morning so I suspect
Monday evening September 4 2017 Hurricane Irma has winds of 140 mph making this a very powerful Category 4 storm. The potential for this to intensify over the next two