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Hurricane Beryl's final blow

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Cat 1 Hurricane Beryl leaves at least 4 dead in Texas and Louisiana, flooding and destruction in its wake. Almost 2 million are affected by power outages amid extreme heat. Houston  was highly affected although little structural damage was reported.  Meanwhile, Beryl's path is taking her on a posttropical meander around NY State and New England, dropping heavy rainfall and precipitating flash flooding. 

TS Beryl to become a hurricane again

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NYT Tracker   After grazing Hispaniola and Jamaica, where they had far less damage than expected from a Category 3 Hurricane, Beryl made landfall near Tulum, Mexico as a Cat 2 storm. Cancun and Playa del Carmen, which Alex and I spent some time in a few years back, took the brunt. They didn't have as much damage as they could have sustained with 110 mph winds and Beryl degraded to a tropical storm.  It is now over the Gulf of Mexico and projected to return to hurricane status as the Gulf waters remain extremely warm. It will likely make landfall in Texas around the Corpus Cristi area on Sunday evening, and they are bracing for catastrophic flooding from the storm surge.  Our first major hurricane of the season is having quite a record-breaking history. 

Beryl heading for Jamaica

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  Hurricane Beryl approaching Jamaica After making direct landfall over Carriacou and leaving a path of destruction from Barbados, to Tobago, Grenada, St Vincent and the Grenadines and Venezuela, Hurricane Beryl, the first Cat 4 storm to form in the month of June, is now hurtling toward Jamaica as a Cat 5 hurricane, the earliest ever formed. Never has there been so powerful a storm so early in the season. Alex sent a message to Chris in Jamaica and Marika responded that they are in the midst of making preparations asking us to pray for the people and the island. We are worried about them with Hurricane Beryl looking to make a direct hit. Chris owns several properties in Jamaica under the Island Outpost brand. Golden Eye  Ian Fleming's home in Oracabessa, is the most famous. There is also Strawberry Hill Hotel in the Blue Mountains above Kingston and The Caves in Negril. He also owns a 1,000-acre jungle farmhouse, Pantrepant , 20 miles from Montego Bay, where organic ing...

Trinidad and Tobago welcomes yachts escaping Beryl

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As Grenada, typically considered a safe haven for yachts during hurricane season, is in the path of Hurricane Beryl, hundreds of yachts have made the passage to Trinidad and Tobago. The island nation has made provisions for the safe passage and entry of yachts into their waters.  Boats departing from Grenada https://x.com/i/status/1807599509192495566 https://x.com/i/status/1807736345432916082 https://x.com/i/status/1807770279772323910   Barbados and Tobago seem to be making it through okay. But the Cat 4 hurricane has just had an eye wall replacement cycle and its eye wall is heading straight over Grenada and Cariacou. God help them. The destructive force is going to be devastating.  Tropical Storm Chris has formed in the Bay of Campeche and is bringing storm-force winds and heavy rain to Mexico.  Boats heading to Trinidad

Atlantic Hurricane Beryl

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  Beryl is heading in a straight line for the Windward Islands. It looks like it will bruch over Barbados before making it's way over Grenada and St Vincent and the Grenadines. At current projections the eye will move over Carriacou and then head directly to Jamaica. Because the tropical SSTs are off the charts, they expect rapid development to a Category 4 storm. God help the people.  And, there's a second system forming behind it and expected to follow the same track as high pressure is blocking its way North. Looks like La Nina is doing her thing.  Meanwhile, there's a system forming in the Gulf of Mexico. Here we go. 

Gale force

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  We just had gusts to 48.6 knots. We made the right decision. I would not like to be at anchor in the Aran Islands or Inishbofin in this. 

Aleria is ready to come home

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We launched  Aleria  a week ago and could only clean her up a bit. She was filthy and took a lot of scrubbing. I got the cockpit cleaned up and below decks as well. Didn't have time to get to the decks. Meanwhile, it took Alex a while to secure the docklines and take care of a few issues that needed immediate attention.  We were to return Monday, put up the sails and bring her home starting Tuesday. But the forecast changed dramatically with a gale packing up to 50-knot gusts by Thursday and in the upper 30s by Wednesday. We couldn't take that chance.  I suggested we return on Tuesday afternoon when winds were forecast to be about 10 knots gusting 15 from the North, stay overnight as there would be no wind in the morning and we could finish up what we didn't get to on Tuesday. We had to put up the sails, climb the mizzen to run a halyard we had lost last year, inflate the dinghy, fill the water tanks, check the gas and other systems. Clouds in light Northerlies Tuesd...