Originally Posted by Oldman03
Originally Posted by Birdwatcher
Originally Posted by Jim_Conrad
I wouldn't like a hurricane....but I think I would like to watch one make its way to shore.



I’ve only experienced them as weak tropical storms after they came inland.

The first thing different as you get into the outskirts is the steady breeze that doesn’t quit, like what you would get from an electric fan but everywhere. It feels distinct and ominous, heralding the approach of the storm. What you are experiencing is the outer edge of the humongous mass of air rotating around the eye. Air has mass and momentum to a degree most folks don’t realize.

Up above 100% overcast with the whole sky moving in unison, if you can see far enough you can make out the sky is moving in an arc relative to wherever the eye is The rain is heavy and is the warmest rain you ever felt.

All that air that rose in the hurricane has to come down, an it does, beyond the edges of the storm, becoming warm and dry as it descends with a chinook effect, if East Texas is getting hammered San Antonio can be unusually hot and dry.

One time there was a tropical storm passing to the west, it was clear and sunny where I was but on the western horizon you could see a mass of clouds all in motion. Basically, if you’ve seen the satellite images of a storm rotating around an eye, from the ground it looks like you would expect it to.


To add to what Birdie said. There is an eerie feeling that cant be described. Birds disappear, cattle will stop feeding and herd up at the barn or in the woods, and all this a before the storms hits, a day or two earlier. The sky takes on a strange glow, before the complete cloud cover.

It's different!


The worst one for me came through at night. My first wife kept waking me up, she was very scared. My neighbors 600 ft green house was wrapped around the back of our house and just raising hell flapping and popping in the rain and wind.

I thought that was going to be a good thing but it made a kind of funnel, flooded the dining room and kitchen flooring, water running under one door.

Beer helps.

Last edited by blindshooter; 08/28/21.