Hurricane Lee is moving slowly in the southern Atlantic approaching the Leeward Islands. [NHC DATA HERE] Residents on the Southeast coast of the USA should monitor. Lee is expected to become a major hurricane later tonight as it moves toward the west-northwest over the next few days.
Hurricane Lee is still a long distance from presenting any immediate risk, but prudent checks and evaluations of your situation should take place. Keep an eye on the National Hurricane Center for updates. The storm is not anticipated to be a major focus until mid-week next week.
At 1100 AM AST (1500 UTC), the center of Hurricane Lee was located near latitude 16.4 North, longitude 50.0 West. Lee is moving toward the west-northwest near 15 mph (24 km/h), and this motion is expected to continue through Friday. A slower motion toward the west-northwest is forecast over the weekend. On the forecast track,the core of Lee will move north of the northern Leeward islands during the next few days. (link)
Obviously, this is currently a long way from the eastern U.S. However, coastal residents should keep an eye on Lee and evaluate their pre-existing preparedness plans.
In my last set of proactive suggestions, {GO DEEP HERE} I focused first and foremost on something few discuss, mental capability. Due to what I witnessed in Hurricane Ian with the people of the area, I am always going to put this into the analysis now to provide consideration that few understand. I saw Ian literally break strong people down and create a PTSD demographic I have never experienced before.
What follows below are things to consider if you are prepping for a hurricane impact and/or deciding whether to stay in your home or evacuate. Standard hurricane preparations should always be followed. Protect your family, secure your property and belongings, and prepare for the aftermath.
What you do before the hurricane hits is going to determine where you are in the recovery phase.
Additionally, and this should be emphasized and discussed within your family, if you cannot be self-sufficient in the aftermath – for any reason, then you should evacuate. Self-sufficiency in this context requires being able to cope for up to several weeks:
(1) potentially without power; (2) potentially without potable running water (3) potentially without internet service; (4) potentially without communication outside the region; and (5) with limited municipal and private sector assistance. If you decide you cannot deal with these outcomes, you should evacuate.
Additionally, as a family or individual, you should also honestly evaluate:
(1) your physical abilities; (2) your emotional and psychological ability to withstand extreme pressures; and (3) your comfort in losing daily routines, familiar schedules and often overlooked things you might take for granted.
Post hurricane recovery is fraught with stress, frustration and unforeseeable challenges. {GO DEEP}
For those in the cone of uncertainty next week, remember, planning and proactive measures taken now can significantly reduce stress in the days ahead. Plan when to make the best decision on any evacuation (if needed). For now, just keep monitoring the progress of the storm. As a general rule: take cover from wind – but evacuate away from water.
DAY ONE (_____)
- Determine Your Risk
- Make a Written Plan
- Develop and Evacuation Plan
- Inventory hurricane/storm supplies.
DAY TWO (______)
- Get Storm Update
- Assemble and Purchase Hurricane Supplies
- Contact Insurance Company – Updates
- Secure Important Papers.
- Strengthen and Secure Your Home
- Make Evacuation Decision for your Family.
DAY THREE (______)
- Get Storm Update
- Re-Evaluate your Supplies based on storm update.
- Finish last minute preparation.
- Assist Your Neighbors
- If Needed – Evacuate Your Family
Communication is important. Update your contact list. Stay in touch with family and friends, let them know your plans. Select a single point of contact for communication from you that all others can then contact for updates if needed. There is plenty of time to organize your important papers, insurance forms, personal papers and place them in one ‘ready-to-go’ location.
Evaluate your personal hurricane and storm supplies; update and replace anything you might have used. Assess, modify and/or update any possible evacuation plans based on your location, and/or any changes to your family status.
Check your shutters and window coverings; test your generator; re-organize and familiarize yourself with all of your supplies and hardware. Check batteries in portable tools; locate tools you might need; walk your property to consider what you may need to do based on the storms path. All decisions are yours. You are in control.
Consider travel plans based on roads and traffic density. Being proactive now helps to keep any future stress level low. You are in control. If you have pets, additional plans may be needed.
One possible proactive measure is to make a list of hotels further inland that you would consider evacuating to. Make that list and follow updates of the storms’ progress.
Depending on information next week you might call in advance and make a reservation; you can always cancel if not needed. It is better to have a secondary evacuation place established in advance. Being proactive reduces stress. Even if you wait until much later to cancel, it is better to pay a cancellation fee (usually one night charge) than to not have a plan on where to go. Trust me, it’s worth it.
Protect your family. Make the list of possibilities in the next few days.
Look over the National Hurricane Center resources for planning assistance.
Deciding whether to evacuate:
• If you do not handle stress well, leave.
• If you cannot be self-sufficient in the aftermath, leave.
• If you choose to stay pay super close attention to the exact path of the storm. A few miles make a massive difference when you are dealing with the possibility of encountering the eyewall of a hurricane.
This is a fury of nature, a battle where the odds are against you, that you may or may not be aware you are contemplating when you are choosing to stay or evacuate. It’s not the hurricane per se’, it’s that much smaller killer buzzsaw – the eyewall- that you are rolling the dice, never to see.
When it comes to the eyewall, the truest measure of the “cone of uncertainty“, the difference between scared out of your mind (victim) and a fight to avoid death (survivor), is literally a matter of a few miles. And there ain’t no changing your mind once it starts.
♦ Hardening your home is a matter of careful thought and physical work. However, every opening into your structure must be protected, leaving yourself with one small exit opportunity just in case. Hopefully you have a bolted door with no glass windows you can use as an emergency exit. If not, select a small window and leave only enough room uncovered for you to get out in case of emergency or structural collapse.
Beyond the ordinary supplies like drinking water, batteries, flashlights, battery or hand-crank radio, generators, gasoline, etc. Evaluate the scale of what you have against the likelihood of weeks without power or water. A few pro tips below:
♦ Put three 30-gallon trash cans in the shower and fill them with water before the storm. This will give you 90 gallons of water for cooking and personal hygiene. You will also need water to manually flush your toilets. Bottled water is great for drinking, hydrating and toothbrushing, but you will need much more potable water if the municipal supply is compromised or broken.
♦ A standard 6,500-to-8,500-watt generator will run for approximately 8 hours on five gallons of gasoline. Do not run it all the time. Turn it on, chill the fridge, make coffee, use the microwave or charge stuff, then turn it off. Do this in 4-hour shifts and the fridge will be ok and your gasoline will last longer. Gasoline is a scarce and rare commodity in the aftermath of a hurricane. Gas stations don’t work without power. Check the oil in the generator every few days. Also, have a can of quick start or butane available in case the generator starts acting up.
♦ Extension cords. If you are purchasing them buy at least one 50 to 100′ extension cord with a triple ponytail. This way you can use one cord into a central location to charge up your electronic devices. Establish a central recharging station for phones, pads, laptops, and rechargeable stuff.
♦ Purchase a box of “contractor garbage bags” and just keep them in the garage. These are large, thick, industrial trash bags that fit 40-gallon drums. They can be used for trash, or even cut open for tarps in the aftermath of a storm. These thick mil contractor bags have multiple uses following a hurricane.
♦ Do all of your laundry before the hurricane hits. You will likely not have the ability again for a few weeks.
♦ Cook a week’s worth of meals in advance of the hurricane. Store in fridge so you can microwave for a meal. Eating a constant diet of sandwiches gets old after the first week. Dinty Moore canned beef stew and or Chef-boy-ardee raviolis can make a nice break…. anything, except another sandwich.
♦ Have bleach for use in disinfecting stuff before and after a hurricane. Also have antibiotics and antiseptics for use. Hygiene and not getting simple infections after a hurricane is critical and often forgotten. Again, this is where the extra potable water becomes important. Simple cuts and scrapes become big deals when clean potable water is not regularly available. Keep your scrapes and abrasions clean and use antiseptic creams immediately.
♦ Do not forget sunscreen and things to relieve muscle aches and pains. Hurricane recovery involves physical effort. You will be sore and/or exposed to the elements. Remember, it’s all about self-sufficiency because the normal services are not available. A well-equipped first aid kit is a must have.
♦ Buy a small camping stove. Nothing big or expensive, just something you can cook on outside in case of emergency. It will be a luxury when you are 2+ weeks without power and all the stores and restaurants are closed for miles.
♦ Those small flashlights that you can strap around your head that take a few AAA batteries? Yup, GOLD. Those types of handsfree flashlights are lifesavers inside and outside when you need to see your way around. Nighttime is especially dark without electricity in the entire town. Doing stuff like filling a generator with gasoline in the middle of the night is much easier with one of those head strap flashlights. Strongly advise getting a few, they’re inexpensive too.
♦ Cash. You will need it. Without power anything you may need to purchase will require cash, especially gasoline. Additionally, anyone you hire to help or support your immediate efforts will need to be paid. Cash is critical. How much, depends on your individual situation, but your cash burn rate will likely go into the thousands in the first few days. Also keep in mind, you may or may not be able to work and without internet access even getting funds into place could be challenging.
♦ Hardware. A box of self-tapping sheet metal screws (short and long) is important, along with a box or two of various wood screws or Tyvex screws. A battery drill or screw gun is another necessity. Check all of this stuff during hurricane prep.
ps. Thanks to those who have written and shared their appreciation for the planning prior to Idalia impact. We are blessed and thankful to live in a beautiful world provided by a loving God. Sit with Him, talk to Him, make time for Him. Never lose faith and heed the instinct of your prayer filled gut for your best counsel.
Thanks SD!
You’re the best!
Been through more hurricanes than I care to say. You just never get used to them. The fear and stress never seems to end when one of these storms hits.
Just praying for rain in our severely drought-stricken Texas. Maybe it will turn into the gulf and bring us some relief.
Your prayers most likely will be answered next week. Heavy rains and cooler temps coming. Below are the rainfall and temperature forecasts according to the European model ensemble. Joe Bastardi agrees with their forecast.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F5YdQYaXMAA1ps6?format=png&name=medium
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F5YdSz9XYAAnLfu?format=png&name=medium
Bastardi is tops in his field.
Yes sir, they keep saying this El Nino is going to bring us some cooler, wetter weather and please Lord, let it be soon.
As Sundance mentioned it is just a night of motel expense if you cancel. Also remember the effort anyone makes in evacuating only to learn the hurricane turned away, is worth it. Yes it is stressful dealing with the whole ordeal but you will be safe. As well do not wait until the last minute to leave. Just the very long slow line is stressful in itself. Prayers to all.
That’s a very clever idea. “Have a place to evacuate TO” is good policy and practice. I think all Florida residents who are at risk in a general sense should be able to take a fair amount of important/valuable things with them which means having a vehicle capable of carrying it. ALSO “real” and untainted gasoline.
Solid point on the suddenly “tainted gasoline” in FL. Not like that wasn’t intentional. CitGo being a Venezuela owned Oil Co. and all?
stressful for women more than men. alpha males would generally not be all that stressed out.
Yeah, cos it is the women who do all the prep work.
Bammmm!
Right on Sc!
LEE is looking healthy but is still a small storm. Forecasted by the NHC to reach CAT V strength which means sustained winds in excess of 155 mph. Though Florida is probably off the table places north of there along the eastern seaboard certainly aren’t and neither is Bermuda. If I lived in New England I would be getting nervous. Both the US GFS and European spaghetti track has shifted a bit west with several of the component tracks showing hits in Maine after brushing cape Cod.
Still a lot of uncertainty in the actual track though. About everyone agrees it will turn north but no certainty about how far west it will go before doing so. Until the weather and jet stream patterns are better set for the time the storm gets closer to the US mainland that uncertainty will remain. Levi Cowan and Tropical Tidbits is not even putting out a video today for that reason. Still too many variables to nail down.
Hurricane Lee at 16.4°N – 50.0°W – NOAA / NESDIS / STAR
Just like the last one that came and went with very little damage the spaghetti models will come next.
Keep track of how many times their “Forecast” changes because these people have an accuracy rate the same as your local weather forecaster.
Cat 5 ?
I’d bet it never gets there
I’d bet it gets to at least a 4.
rd will have to suspend his campaign again.
The spaghetti models for Idalia were spot-on from six days out, down to the inch, and barely changed from day to day.
At 5pm advisory it was already a cat 4 with 135 mph winds, forcast to be 165 mph in about 12 hours.
You really can’t bet one way or another for the same reasons the forecasting can be wildly wrong. When living in the path of these storms one needs to always be prepared to lose it all in the drop of a hat. On the same note only a very small percentage ever do lose everything.
I just wonder why in a free country people who live out of the path are forced to pay for those who choose the life style of living in the path.
Just discussing this with my wife and noted that two forecasts, at least in our area, are worthwhile. The 10 day out forecast for general trend and the 24 hour for the next day. Everything else in between is simply noise.
For this hurricane the big thing I noted is the stagnation of travel south of Bermuda. When something that large sits in one spot it sucks the energy out of itself and degrades. I would expect to see just that happen prior to a steering current pushing it north. Once it tracks north it can pick some energy up and still be pretty dangerous. The rough part in this storm is that big unknown of where does it track after Tuesday?
Yes and people should get some GASOLINE cans filled. Can’t have saboteurs destroying peoples’ cars “accidentally” again.
Dang did that happen?
what about those ev’s everyone is talking about? should always buy a 10K spare i suppose.
Take SD’s advice…Here’s his ground zero.
Stay in a constant state of preparation during the peak of the season.
“What do you have to lose?”, said someone.
These storms can turn on a dime.
Those are powerful videos.
Staying in a constant state of preparation is the answer, it also helps if you are a person of means, which I am not. I have a sister in Florida and while I don’t like the thought of her having to endure any of the hurricanes I know I don’t have to worry because they have cash and plenty of it to get away.
I don’t remember the storm, but they stayed and said never again. If one comes close they pack up and leave long before anyone is even thinking about it because they can afford it. They are an older couple and don’t have the oomph it takes anymore to do the work. Not everyone is so fortunate. I have to say they are generous w/donations when it comes to helping others w/the aftermath.
Dang – my daughter is heading to Orlando for a trip I gave her family for Christmas. Starts this Saturday through next… Oh well – at least her permanent home isn’t threatened. Thanks for the update and prayers for all who live in the path of this storm!
A big huge thank you from St. Lucie County!
twice I experienced the aftermath of direct category 5 hurricane hits (Hugo, Marilyn, St Thomas)
people were nicer then; we bar-b-qued our thawing beef & chicken, then had picnics with our neighbors before it all spoiled
we looked our for each other and survived three months with no power
when storms strip the bark from trees, that’s CAT5
Nowadays I’m not sure people would be as nice to each other but I guess it depends on where you live
Buenos Dias. Here’s a tip to reduce the number of mosquito bites in tropical areas. Especially after a storm. We’ve been taking black garlic capsules for 4 years. Good for blood pressure and flies and mosquitoes avoid us like a plague. De Nada.
Great tip.
The blood suckers no longer bite me after a clove of Russian garlic each morning. Remember to take a probiotic as garlic is one of Nature’s best antibiotics and will throw off your beneficial gut bacteria.
It will conveniently track to hit Georgia and destroy fraudulent ballots in storage that have been hidden away to vindicate Trump. Lol.
Sundance, what are immediate problems for someone who lives on the Potomac near where it empties into the Chesapeake, should the Bay take a direct hit?
I have family in that spot. With 3 kids and 6 doggies.
Thanks in advance.
You don’t say what bank, but I would say on the Md side there won’t be much outside help because it’s pretty isolated. Don’t know Va upper neck that much (though used to spend a lot of time in Dahlgren) but I think it’s much the same.
Elevation is everything.
What is the tidal and storm surge capacity? IE if the max flooding potential from tides and storm surge is below the home/neighborhood elevation you will likely be ok, otherwise keep a hard eye on that and get out if necessary.
If you live near possible flooding, assess the flooding risk and if it’s slight, invest in sand bags. If it’s more than slight, put all your valuables on the 2nd floor and leave.
I doubt wind will cause you big issues in that area unless you live on a very broad expanse of water, where it’s still likely to be water that will cause you problems. Unless your roof fails…
LIVE TRACK | Hurricane Lee’s latest forecast, spaghetti models, and more
https://commoncts.blogspot.com/2023/09/live-track-hurricane-lees-latest.html
Another tip for those who don’t usually have to evacuate but may be without power for some days…Crank up your air conditioning so that your house is very cold. Start about 2 days ahead of time.
If power goes out the house will stay fairly cool those first few days after.
I’m in the northeast, did this for Sandy and Irene. My family thought I was crazy but ever so grateful once our power went out
I normally dont do Tik Tok but its all over there maps showing Lee may merge w one if not two other?? Thank you for this Sundance
If I lived on or near the coast or in lowlands further inland in hurricane country I would have a bug out kit ready. In the kit would be all the necessities that I don’t need secured or to use during normal times a home. Duplicates of cheaper items that are used daily or frequently would be put in the kit. Then a list of things to add to the kit before leaving and of course a list of necessary actions that would be taken to harden and prepare the home and ensure I have the everything needed to go.
Do people fleeing a storm or other emergency have the right to push a stalled Tesla or other EV off the road by whatever means necessary? (asking for a friend)
Think “What would a Demoncrat do?” Don’t you know a judge?
NOAA and the Hurricane Center should have a link to your hurricane preparation information, sir.
I bet 4 or better……. a definite GTFOH decision.
Last time they were flipping out over a “major storm” nothing happened. The media is in full hysteric mode and can’t stop itself. From storms to covid, when something actually bad happens it will be too late. That said I hope this storm doesn’t get as bad as they wish.
You said it best; “… as they wish.”
These freaks dream of destruction at every. single. turn.
The worst culprit on this is the Weather Channel. They love the dramatic. On Friday they will start saying half of the USA will be affected, 100 million will lose power and another 100 million will have extensive property damage. They love scaring the shit out of people and then 2 days before the storm doesn’t show up as THEY EXPECTED they run with their tails between their legs.
I have a vacation in OBX scheduled for the 16th through the 24th, and I’m praying that this storm dissipates in the Atlantic!
I will be watching this one closely, as there’s no quick way out of the Outer Banks if it came to it.
The Outer Banks will be history if it sees a Cat 4 or 5. It’s not much more than a 2 mile wide 6ft high sandbar.
Been here 30 years and never left for a hurricane…..yet. I’ve seen channels cut through the outer banks a couple of times. I live on the mainland 5 miles from the ocean, less than a mile from the sound. However, I no longer live in the fortress my husband built so I’ll decide later what to do. This condo will probably be toothpicks after a cat 4 or 5.
Stay safe Dixie. You’re a veteran of the coast and know what to do.
😎
That is one of the places I would support a no rebuild policy. God put them there to be a barrier. Living there seems reckless.
So, did the same God allow humans to build there?
Why do you think YOU get to decide what I do?
It’s been there and weathered these storms for hundreds of years. It will be after after this one. (I have a home on Hatteras Island). Currently I will be traveling there on Sept 17 unless the storm interferes.
One detail I would add to SD’s extensive list is verifying your tetanus vax shot status and make sure you’re current.
If you do have the misfortune of living in an area that is damaged, or you pitch in to help your neighbors with their damage, rusty nails, rusty screws, and sharp edges are a common hazard. You don’t want to get knocked out of action by something like tetanus, especially if you’re older, unvaxed, or immunocompromised. In some rare cases, it can be fatal. This isn’t Chicken Little “the sky is falling!” stuff, just common sense.
On a positive note, almost all the last long range models I saw show the storm turning north somewhere Tuesday or Wednesday when it’s north of the Dominican Republic/Haiti. Those are long range models and a lot can happen between now and then, but virtually all of them agree, which is encouraging.
Stay safe, y’all.
This post ain’t just about hurricanes.
Think about the posts where the mules pulled the hardest when the going was toughest . . .
don’t forget to plan for your pets as well..If you plan to evacuate
find pet friendlyhotels. Be sure you have food for your pets and
if you are leaving make sure you have your pets immunization records..
Also bring some familiar things for them to have
while away like thier favorite toy or blanket. if you stay be sure your dogs
are leashed when ever they go out don;t let them go out to do potty
by themselves.
Also if the power is out remember to get propane ahead of time
for your grill you can boil water and do basic cooking on your outdoor
grill if need be..
Consider adding a chainsaw to your list. My good friend lives in Orlando and was in a hurricane. She lives alone and a large tree fell across her driveway trapping her car inside. She said she was frantic wondering how she was going to get this large tree moved when along came a neighbor with his chainsaw and he removed it for her. He was going up and down their street chopping up trees for everyone and was a lifesaver to many.
I hope she baked something for him.
couldnt agree more.
Generac Standby Generators are amazing. Power goes out, a few seconds later, pop, your power is back on and runs until power is back up. Natural gas or propane. We have one and they run everything in the house. Yes they are expensive but well worth it, especially for older people and people who might have trouble starting, filling, gasoline generators.
Check out Zoom earth!!
https://zoom.earth/places/mexico/
Ventusky as well.
We’re are on the DelMarva coast so we’ll keep a close eye out. Idalia gave us dangerous riptides even hundreds of miles offshore.
Sundance, thank you very much for your tips on preparing for a hurricane. They’re good ideas for other disasters, also.
I’ll go through this article and do what you say, to prepare for a possible emergency where I live. (Ex: Buying flashlights that attach to your head, to keep your hands free.)
Looks like this is going to push north, might hit New England area. But expect full spectrum hype and the associated “climate change”.
Latest from Ryan Hall, four hours ago.
I’m a little concerned about this 1. It could be a major problem.
CTH is always tracking these weather beasts for the benefit of their readers.
Before the National Hurricane Center existed or any sustained reporting and predicting of hurricanes occurred this PPM song noted how perilous sea travel could be.
If the documentary I watched was correct, Dan Rather’s first ever extensive hurricane coverage and first radar image of Hurricane Carla in 1961 was when the Hurricane death count began to decline precipitously. Especially for sailors and their seagoing ships.
Rather, “took a camera crew to the U.S. Weather Bureau (now the NWS) office in downtown Galveston, which featured a cutting-edge WSR-57 radar console. Seeing the size of the coming storm, he convinced the bureau staff to let him broadcast, live, from the office…and he asked a Weather Bureau meteorologist to draw him a rough outline of the Gulf of Mexico on a transparent sheet of plastic; during the broadcast…As CBS plugged into the broadcast, that audience suddenly became a national one.” (Atlantic)
This was Rather at the pinnacle of his career IMO, and before he became a politicized puppet of MSM etc.
He and Cronkite were already headed in the wrong direction by that time, but it didn’t start to become evident until about 5 years later during the Vietnam war and from there it went down hill. Their “reporting” on the Tet Offensive of 1968 was pure disinformation.
I notice LEE is moving at 14 mph per the NHC. That is not “slow” but about average. Conditions favorable for it probably until it comes across the colder surface waters churned up by the passing of Idalia and Franklin.
That is what tropical cyclones do! They are a very efficient mechanism of earths thermoregulatory system. They take thermal energy from the tropics and convert a great deal of it to kinetic energy, carry part of it up into the colder regions of the troposphere, as they transport the balance towards the poles through the generally cooler temperate zones.
The thing is that for so far this century there is a clear trend towards Atlantic hurricanes becoming smaller. The proportion of really big storms covering massive areas with tropical storm force winds has been declining.
In tropical cyclones, it is not just the windspeeds, size matters. The larger the storm of a given category the more thermal energy it converts and transports. Also the larger the storm the greater the storm surge will be if it makes landfall.
Damn climate change acting up again…./s
I might just have to dust off the Quiet Flight surfboard and pipe out over to Sebastian Inlet to catch a few sets this week.
Being on the East coast Mikes Weather Page is a go to during the season, in the off season click on it every so often just to make sure he’s still there and to see his latest Tee shirts.
Not bad for a guy that grew up in what used to be mostly dairy farms and a drag strip.
I’ve run into more than one person with some version of a Drunk Donkey shirt.
As of now hoping that Margot sucks Lee all the way to the middle of the Atlantic.
One thing. If LEE does happen to hit New England or even pass close enough to drop a bunch of rain the flooding disaster will be amplified because the ground will already be saturated by the heavy rains they are having and are forecast to continue to have for the next several days.
Kind of looks like it’s hitting right now. Windiest and strongest sudden thunderstorm I’ve seen yet this season. Can barely see anything outside my windows.
Earlier today there was no rain in the forecast at all.
(Location is blueMA suburb northwest of Boston.)
know the area. I was stationed at Ft. Devens when it was active for 5 1/2 years.
Update – storm is now over, left only half an inch of water in my meter.
More forecast for tomorrow afternoon, we shall see…
I think this beast might track further up the east coast. Not that we wish it on anyone. Hopefully everyone is sorting their prep and safety.
Good luck to everyone in harms way.
Most likely track to hit US at this time is near the Maine Canadian border. However this is very preliminary and they won’t start getting a real handle on the track concerning possible landfall on the US until it turns north. Still a possibility of it missing everything but the further west it tracks before turning north the less likely that will occur.
I hope it changes course, misses the south and then aims for WDC and Biden’s house in Delaware and his favorite beach
Lol. How funny would that be?
Or Martha’s Vinyard and Obama’s sea side mansion.