• last year
Much of Maine, as well as parts of New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island, will face impacts from Hurricane Lee. How will it compare to storms that have taken a similar track before?
Transcript
00:00 This is an interesting storm.
00:01 Whenever these storms move into the New England states or the Canadian Maritimes, which is
00:05 not terribly uncommon, but it does happen, it becomes kind of an interesting storyline
00:11 as people often associate tropical systems with the tropics and those warmer climates.
00:15 And we want to talk to long-time AccuWeather meteorologist Dave Dombek about this.
00:20 Dave spends a lot of time forecasting in the northeastern U.S.
00:23 You may hear his voice from time to time on radio stations in the big markets in the northeast
00:28 as well.
00:29 Dave, thanks again for joining us.
00:31 Absolutely, my pleasure.
00:33 Well, Dave, Hurricane Lee is still churning.
00:36 Right now it's only moving at six miles per hour, still a Category 3 storm.
00:41 But the future of this will behave a little differently as we're going to see this accelerate
00:45 into the New England states.
00:46 So just off the bat, where are you most concerned about the impacts of rain, wind, and also
00:51 storm surge flooding for the area around New England and perhaps parts of the northeast?
00:57 Well, I think this graphic, Jeff, really points it out very well.
01:02 And there will be a sharp gradation in both the wind speeds and any rain that does fall.
01:07 Certainly you're looking at around Cape Cod, Boston area, and on eastward and northeastward
01:12 from there.
01:13 So certainly down east Maine is our biggest concern, and into Atlantic Canada, Nova Scotia
01:18 certainly seems to be right in the main path there and parts of New Brunswick.
01:24 But even some local effects, depending on the wind direction for a time, that area around
01:29 Boston Harbor, down into that notch in Cape Cod, if the winds are northeast for a time,
01:35 you get a good fetch.
01:36 That could be an area where the water could pile up and you could have some issues down
01:39 in there as well.
01:40 And certainly we're looking at a lot of wind.
01:42 On the back side of the west side of this storm track here, there's going to be everything
01:47 lined up quite well with the wind.
01:50 And so we could be looking at gusts, perhaps even back as far as Montauk Point out on Long
01:55 Island, east end of Long Island, gusts to 50 miles per hour or so.
02:01 And a forecast is always kind of a living, breathing thing from day to day, shift to
02:05 shift, even hour to hour.
02:06 We're always looking at things with a new lens as best we can.
02:10 So where do we stand today compared to maybe 24 hours ago with our confidence that we're
02:14 going to have trouble in eastern Maine versus maybe the Jersey Shore?
02:19 I would say definitely a higher confidence today.
02:22 You know, as we go forward, areas along the coast, we've been able to kind of, if you
02:29 will, ax it off as far as like our concern.
02:31 Like we've pretty much eliminated in Florida, the Carolinas, Virginia, the Delmarva, the
02:37 Jersey Shore, you're going to get some effects, certainly with rip currents all along the
02:41 eastern seaboard.
02:42 That's going to be an issue for at least a couple of days and some rough surf.
02:46 There'll be some wind effect down along the Jersey Shore, but from there southward, we're
02:50 quite confident that we're not worried about any kind of really direct effects from Lee.
02:56 But as you go farther north, the concern is still there and we're very worried, like I
03:01 said, parts of Maine and into Atlantic Canada.
03:05 And we showed at the top of this hit the eye path here for Lee, and we're explicitly forecasting
03:11 a landfall, most likely in Nova Scotia, but perhaps again, as we look at some of the different
03:16 model guidance and so forth, there's a chance this could still come in as far west as Maine.
03:21 But the coastline is very different in parts of Maine compared to, say, along the coast
03:27 of Florida.
03:28 So we want to talk about that, but I also want to talk to you a little bit about the
03:32 history of New England hurricanes from the 1900s.
03:35 We've had many of these.
03:36 It's been a little while, but what are some of those memorable storms that jump out to
03:40 you when we think about historical New England hurricanes?
03:42 Well, I guess the big one, you know, the benchmark one, Jeff, in the last 100 years or so would
03:50 have to be the 1938 hurricane.
03:52 This is before hurricanes were actually named.
03:55 That was a very devastating hurricane.
03:57 It came, you could see the path there, a very devastating pathway that came in from like
04:01 the south, southeast and all on that east flank.
04:05 A good portion of New England was in the really dangerous quadrant of that storm.
04:11 And just some statistics on that, 700 deaths, the winds up to over 120 mile per hour gusts,
04:18 some peak wave heights up to 50 feet, 8,900 buildings were destroyed and 2 billion trees
04:26 were knocked down from that storm.
04:28 That's one of the most memorable ones in the last 100 years.
04:32 As far as recent memory, the last one to make a landfall in New England, Bob, Hurricane
04:38 Bob Category 2, and it was in 1991, in August of 1991.
04:44 A very memorable one for a lot of us who are working here at AccuWeather, some who were
04:49 in the New England states at that time.
04:51 And Bob, just briefly, how does the coastline, maybe the rocky nature of the coastline in
04:56 eastern Maine differ from that in Cape Cod and the relative risk?
04:59 How does that play out with these storms?
05:03 That's interesting.
05:04 It is a different situation and you do have rocky coast in that.
05:08 And of course you have colder water.
05:10 These storms, that's why you really can't maintain a powerful Category 5 or 4 or whatever
05:16 3 storm way northward because the water gets colder or cooler as you go northward.
05:21 So typically the storms, as far as their category is concerned, they wind down as far as they're
05:28 on the Saffir-Simpson scale, but they're still very large and powerful storms.
05:34 And sometimes they transition into a hybrid system where they're trying to interact with
05:40 the mid-latitude trough and cold fronts and so forth, and they turn into a hybrid storm
05:44 and their effects tend to go out in a larger area.
05:48 Well, thank you very much for that insight there.
05:51 We appreciate that.
05:52 Dave Dabek here from AccuWeather.
05:53 with it.

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