Does Auburn not cover their field? I have heard that LSU covers the field as necessary to try and protect it if their is the likelihood of monsoons in the area.
The hell with Nash, the only reason they knock the dust off this guy is cause, he is the only person the OLD, and i mean OLD people trust. You want good weather Bob Breck is the man, if he says its gonna hit, start packing. I have never seen him miss.
You all act like these guys have direct connection to mother nature... All they are doing is using computer models, and making educated guesses
From what i saw, its predicted to hit alabama/florida, however, they said big storms such as this have been known to push right through areas of high pressure. If this one does, expect mississippi/eastern la to get hit.
Nash is probably the only hurricane expert I would believe. As for Bob Breck, yes, he is a good weatherman, but I seem to remember him being entirely confident that Hurricane Georges would be a direct hit on the city, while Nash said it would hit the Gulf Coast. What did that storm end up doing? It hit the Gulf Coast. I'm sticking with Nash. By the way, I'm not meaning for this to be a negative post towards you, Crip. Nobody can ever be really sure where a hurricane will hit, but it seems to me that all we're gonna get from Ivan is a thunderstorm or two.
Who would have thought that the level of old-foginess this board had reached? We now have people-quite literally-arguing about the weather, on Tigerforums... During LSU football season, no less!
The good news is that storms are trying to break into the PNW. If those storms make it into the US and can march across the country with some effectiveness, they should eventually pull that storm to NNE as you suggest.
Nash Roberts can predict the path of a hurricane from his window using a paper clip and fishing wire.
When Georges threatened us, Nash Roberts said on that Saturday night at 7pm on WWL-TV that he thought we were going to take a direct hit so we had better evacuate. I'll never forget it. A couple of friends and I left almost immediately to visit friends up at Ole Miss. That storm took a late jog and spared New Orleans a serious blow. I will never forget that night.