High Winds, Heavy Rain… Ahead of IDA
Click on the following link for the latest radar image of Ida. Ida continues to plow toward the Gulf Coast, creating high winds, and dumping heavy rain on Panama City, Florida, Mobile, Alabama and coastal areas outside of New Orleans, Louisiana. TV forecasters in those areas can give you the latest watches and warnings, and current position of Tropical Storm Ida. It appears the worst of the heavy rain is out ahead of the storm.
-Dawn Brown
Ida Weakens In Hostile Environment
Ida weakens due to wind shear, cold sea surface temps, and dry air. All hurricane warnings have been dropped. Tropical storm warnings from Louisiana to Florida. Isolated heavy rainfall along the northern Gulf Coast expected. It looks like Ida is transitioning from a tropical to an extra-tropical or winter-type low pressure system. High winds and isolated heavy rain will still be a problem.
9AM Update from National Hurricane Center:
The center of tropical storm Ida was located near latitude 26.5 North, longitude 88.3 West, or about 185 miles south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi river and about 285 miles south-southwest of Pensacola, Florida
Ida is moving toward the north-northwest near 17 mph. A turn toward the north and then to the north-northeast is expected over the next 24 hours. On the forecast track, the center of Ida is expected to make landfall along the northern Gulf Coast Tuesday morning. After landfall, a turn to the east is expected on Tuesday.
Maximum sustained winds continue to decrease and area now near 70 mph with higher gusts. Some additional weakening is expected today as Ida approaches the coast.
-Dawn Brown
Wind Shear is Ripping Ida Apart
Ida is looking pretty ragged this morning as wind shear over the Gulf Coast is starting to tear the storm apart.
Hurricane Ida’s winds are down to 80 miles an hour. 30 knots or 35 mile per hour wind shear is tearing the storm apart. National Hurricane Center forecasters still forecast a hurricane at landfall, but I think that’s generous to say the storm will maintain these winds over the next 24 hours. I think heavy rain and possibly up to 60 mile per hour winds at landfall are what Gulf Coast residents can expect out of this storm. The tropical storm force winds will be relegated to the Alabama/Florida border.
Hurricane watches and warnings remain for the northern Gulf Coast. For the latest watches and warnings, go to GET YOUR LOCAL TV FORECAST! on the right hand side of this page. It is the last green tab on the right. You can watch forecasters from New Orleans, Louisiana to Tampa, Florida forecasting this storm!
-Dawn Brown


