If you go to the orange beach association's website there is a live feed from Perdido pass. Looks like some pretty good wave action to me.
Printable View
If you go to the orange beach association's website there is a live feed from Perdido pass. Looks like some pretty good wave action to me.
A lady just walked past our condo, walking her dogs on the beach
This is the sunniest tropical storm I've ever seen..LOL
[quote author=saltfisher1 link=topic=1906.msg18107#msg18107 date=1346165139]
This is the sunniest tropical storm I've ever seen..LOL
[/quote]
Give it time.
[img width=597 height=406]http://i1199.photobucket.com/albums/aa466/filtersnow/01.jpg[/img]
[quote author=Bubba link=topic=1906.msg18119#msg18119 date=1346167498]
[img width=597 height=406]http://i1199.photobucket.com/albums/aa466/filtersnow/01.jpg[/img]
[/quote]
Says the man who wanted to paddle out in it.
^^^ With a floating kayak and pfd.
[quote author=Bubba link=topic=1906.msg18122#msg18122 date=1346170737]
^^^ With a floating kayak and pfd.
[/quote]
[size=12pt]We are waiting for the documentary![/size]
http://www.crownweather.com/?p=7097
Quote:
I am writing this short update to give you all a heads-up about potential development in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico as early as Thursday or Friday.
The remnants of Isaac are drifting to the south over southern parts of Alabama this evening and is expected to push back out into the northern Gulf of Mexico during the day Wednesday and has the potential to redevelop into a tropical storm over the northeastern Gulf of Mexico by Thursday into Friday and then potentially be pulled east-northeastward across northern Florida this weekend and into the open Atlantic next week thanks to the pattern setup by Hurricane Leslie.
This idea of redevelopment into a tropical storm has the support of the European, GFS, NAM and Canadian model guidance to one extent or another. So, it is of my opinion this evening that we may have a developing tropical storm in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico just south of Mobile probably by Thursday evening or Friday morning and has the potential to bring squally weather to southern Mississippi, southern Alabama, southern Georgia, the Florida Panhandle and northern Florida from Thursday night to about Saturday before this system is pulled out east-northeastward into the open Atlantic.
[size=12pt]Get the kayak ready Bubba, second chance is coming.
If Crown said it, it's got to be true![/size]