It looks like my Autotrain trip is likely to arrive in Florida right about when a hurricane or tropical storm is hitting the area. Does Amtrak do anything special or different under these conditions? Thanks.
I had a trip canceled because of Hurriance Ian and I am scheduled to travel this week (my rescheduled trip), so I am hoping Nicole will miss Florida.It looks like my Autotrain trip is likely to arrive in Florida right about when a hurricane or tropical storm is hitting the area. Does Amtrak do anything special or different under these conditions? Thanks.
I’m not so sure. As @pennyk says Amtrak is very cautious if severe weather could affect the safe operation of trains. I live near Sanford and current weather alert says:You should be fine.
Thank you. I was considering changing arrival to the following day, but that might not help, if the worst weather is still occurring Friday. Appreciate your response.I had a trip canceled because of Hurriance Ian and I am scheduled to travel this week (my rescheduled trip), so I am hoping Nicole will miss Florida.
The St. Johns River and Lake Monroe in Sanford were greatly affected by Hurricane Ian. I do not know how much more rain that area can handle without overflowing the river and lake. I live in Orlando and am watching the local news. I believe the worst weather will be coastal Brevard County (southeast of Sanford) Wednesday - Friday.
If winds are anticipated to be high and/or tracks will be flooded or damaged, Amtrak will cancel trains. I am hoping that will not happen since I do not want to get "stuck" in NYC.
I hope you are able to travel and enjoy your trip to Florida.
Thank you Palmland. I was considering changing my arrival to Friday a.m. in FL, but we may also encounter the storm coming up the coast. I will decide tomorrow, if Amtrak hasn't already decided!I’m not so sure. As @pennyk says Amtrak is very cautious if severe weather could affect the safe operation of trains. I live near Sanford and current weather alert says:
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I lived in Winter Park and if it's coming in this weak, you know by the time it hits Sanford, it's a just a rainstorm.I’m not so sure. As @pennyk says Amtrak is very cautious if severe weather could affect the safe operation of trains.
The path shows the storm heading up the eastern US coast after leaving Florida. Do you forsee Amtrak canceling the Silvers out of NYP on Friday?Its path will change some more as the final configuration of the High Pressure Ridge and the Trough behind it in the north reaches its final state. Those are providing the steering currents. For now it will be a Wednesday night Thursday morning event in Central Florida. It will be long gone from Central Florida by Friday. The bad weather is mostly front loaded.
What CSX will do is hard to fathom. It will be a tropical depression with wind speeds possibly below the tropical storm threshold. We don’t know exactly where it will go for sure. The cone is very wide.The path shows the storm heading up the eastern US coast after leaving Florida. Do you forsee Amtrak canceling the Silvers out of NYP on Friday?
As they say, the difference between a high end tropical storm and a Cat 1 hurricane is 1mph.NWS Hurricane Center is showing it as strengthening to hurricane force by the time it makes landfall Thursday morning in the Melbourne/Cape Canaveral area. It would then weaken as it moves over land then continue up the coast getting to the mid-Atlantic by Saturday. They are still showing it as a storm not a depression by Saturday so we have to be concerned in the Northeast about another Sandy type storm.
Didn’t Sandy merge with a storm from the west when it reached the mid-Atlantic which caused it to be Super Sandy?As they say, the difference between a high end tropical storm and a Cat 1 hurricane is 1mph.
It will not be Sandy type anything. Sandy was a mid Category 1 Hurricane. This will at most be a low end extra tropical storm. It will have a very large wind field like Sandy though, but will be a very fast mover, unlike Sandy.
That simply suggests that no one believes that we will see wind speeds anywhere near 86mph. I don;t see anyone putting up shutters around here yet, and the center of circulation currently is supposed pass right over us. But as I said that could change in the next 24 hours, since the thing is just making its first turn, with two more to go. It is another one of those hitting the shore at a sharp angle, so a slight deviation in path can change the point of landfall by a lot.It can't be that bad, NASA's even leaving SLS on the pad to ride it out. What could possibly go wrong?
Yall stay Safe!!!I’m not so sure. As @pennyk says Amtrak is very cautious if severe weather could affect the safe operation of trains. I live near Sanford and current weather alert says:
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Silver service from the North is turning at JAX on Thursday. So no service between JAX and Miami/Tampa on that day.Just got word that train #92, the Silver Star, has been cancelled for Thursday.
We know that it will hit somewhere between Jupiter and Daytona Beach with confidence of 67%. There is no way to know anything more precise than that. There is still a 33% chance that it could be outside that stretch. Things will become clearer by tomorrow evening.Nicole has officially been declared a tropical storm, no longer sub-tropical.
When Ian landed, many did not expect landfall where it actually hit - nor did some expect the extent of the damage left in its wake. At this point, it is still too early to guess how much damage Nicole could leave behind once passed.
And Tropical Storm Warning for Orlando. Local forecasters are saying Orlando could see hurricane-force gusts.We now have a Hurricane Warning which was expected. No surprise there.
The strength will probably not be any greater than Category 1, that too low end. This will be nothing like Ian.
Anything is possible, but realistically there will be huge amount of water damage on the shoreline and flooding damage inland, with predicted storm surge of 3-5'. OTOH it is unlikely that any rail ROW will be significantly damaged. General wind damage will be commensurate with Category 1 Hurricane rapidly reducing in strength to Tropical Storm after landfall.This is true - no one is thinking it will be as destructive as Ian. However, that does not negate the possibility of wind damage, erosion and flooding causing delays and/or damage to trackage and rail ROW
As I mentioned elsewhere that was not a surprise. Usually Hurricane Watches will get promoted to hurricane Warning 48 hours before arrival unless for some reason the storm collapses.They have already issued hurricane warning to some of the Florida coast.
As I mentioned before, the center of the cone passes over my town and I live ten miles inland from the barrier islands. Maximum sustained winds projected around the center of the circulation by the time it gets here is somewhere between 50-60mph. However I would not be surprised if it is a bit more, but I would also suspect that the actual path may not be anywhere near here.I am not on either coast, but the general track across the state does cover where I do live - we have been warned to expect power outages
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