'Bomb Cyclone' Approaches as U.S. Readies For 'Strongest Storm in Northwest History' t.co/ooYZaBWfxh pic.twitter.com/HIIKuyHfK1
— Matt Davio (@MissTrade) October 22, 2021
The next bomb cyclone may become more potent than the first one, and its path will be more menacing. AccuWeather forecasters say it will pack the biggest punch yet in the West, unleashing extreme precipitation, monstrous waves and high winds. t.co/9C0G8qP3I0 pic.twitter.com/x65sm2JXdk
— Breaking Weather by AccuWeather (@breakingweather) October 22, 2021
As it met the criteria for a bomb cyclone on Thursday, the central pressure of the storm over the northern Pacific dropped to lower than that of Hurricane Larry, which was a Category 3 storm. Larry's lowest central pressure was 28.20 inches of mercury. t.co/KlITHTFHM6 pic.twitter.com/FY6ki4Xkxa
— Breaking Weather by AccuWeather (@breakingweather) October 22, 2021
🌊🌊🌊Big waves, coastal wind and even a 🌪️tornado 🌪️threat are likely the big headline for the next "Bomb Cyclone" that will stay offshore of the Pacific Northwest. Anyone on the coast needs to be aware of very dangerous beach conditions arriving Sunday night into Monday. 🌊🌊 pic.twitter.com/hlDrgfpzTP
— Michael Snyder (@SeattleWXGuy) October 22, 2021
Another threat from this monster storm arriving offshore Sunday: 🌪️Tornadoes 🌪️
Cold Air aloft with big shear/helicity will create a unique setup for portions of Western Washington/Oregon.
EXPECT the SPC to issue 2% tornado chances for the Oregon Coast into SW Washington tonight pic.twitter.com/V03gHGjh4W— Michael Snyder (@SeattleWXGuy) October 23, 2021
h/t Doorbert Returns