The water has nowhere to go.
—Nezette Rydell
Once or twice a year, we’ll have one of those week-long cloudy weeks. And when they get those, they have the potential for a foot.
Be prepared, be aware, turn around, don’t drown, don’t drive into those waters, don’t put yourself into harms way.
In the normal pattern of things, those storms, those pieces of energy in that storm track will move out very quickly, and when they do they’ll pull away.
The taller that storm is, the more air that is rushing up. And as that air rushes up into the storm, it is making those winds turn with height, and that spinning is what causes...
It is creating more instability in the atmosphere, allowing the thunderstorms to grow to sizes and heights that we don’t normally see in Hawaii.
We can say that in a period of 30 days we are seeing some near record, if not record, amounts in some of these locations.
Flooding will develop rather quickly in areas that have seen the heavy rains over the last thee weeks. It won’t take much to push those areas back into a dangerous situation. So we all need...
In normal times, it would come for a day or two, then move out. For a number of reasons, globally this winter, the pattern has remained static, and this low-pressure system is not moving out.
I actually am on record three weeks ago saying, ‘no, this is just a normal wet period,’ but we’re definitely past that now.
It gets out much faster than if we had to stop and record these messages each time we issued a warning.
We’re looking at a fairly rainy period for the state of Hawaii, mostly for Kauai and Oahu, beginning sometime tomorrow afternoon, late, and then running through Wednesday and possibly into Thursday moving down into Oahu.
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