Your welcome, I'm working on the long format version of this now that I have some free time. Irma edit will be a fascinating story about one of the strongest Hurricanes to traverse the Caribbean and Florida Keys.
Awesome footage as always Mr.Edds!! Thanks for sharing this with us 👍 I think you will have a busy year. Plenty of warm waters already to start the next season with. Be safe in your travels.
since I've been film Hurricanes they are more frequent and stronger so you are probably right. Even with El Nino Idalia slipped in the Gulf and amost hit me.
This summer will be interesting! Are raindrops still small even in the stronger hurricanes? It’s my understanding that the collision-coalescence process results in smaller raindrops as opposed to the large drops from the Bergeron Process typical in thunderstorms.
Thank you for the preview Jim, was beginning to wonder if you’d ever gotten your new system and got around to working on this one. Can’t wait for the full edit, hope it shows all the stuff that was on Storm Chaser’s Guide, like when you said “I need to get out of it” shortly after you guys got down to ground level and around the corner from the stairs. It seemed like Mark’s responses helped encourage and loosen you up a bit so you could focus and better appreciate as well as enjoy the experience. I know we didn’t exactly get the whole conversation so I’ve always been curious whether not my interpretation of that moment was accurate or not.
By the way your footage of Irma is the absolute best and nastiest I’ve seen, no one else’s comes anywhere even close to it… Nothing else I’ve seen really captured the level of intensity depicted in your footage. 😎
@@CaNTBREaKCHRiS a full scale edit with voiceovers is about 285 hours of editing. Plus I want it to be different than the Curiosity Stream edit, which is really good and why HBO Max is airing it. The smaller edits are easy, The voiceover ones like Haiyan are very time consuming. The smart way to do it is do the voiceovers while you are filming then it's less work in post. I'm working on it when I have time and feel creative.
Wow thanks for finally uploading your Hurricane Irma footage. I've got a few questions. I've watched a lot of Hurricane storm chaser footage. But I noticed they never describe how hot, cold or warm the rain and strong winds are. I always wanted to know what were the temperatures of these hurricanes? Is it a cold wind chill or warm strong winds? Oh and the storm surge 'flooding'. What's the temperature of that water too.
A really bad hurricane is typically very humid and warm. Like Dorian in the Bahamas for example. Contrast with Isabel in 2003 on the Outer Banks, NC which for me was cooler and I had to wear full pants and jacket. But all hurricane should be warm core unless than are transitioning to cold core over cooler waters. One one exception I would say is if the wind and rain have been blowing all day, you'll get cold from loss of heat. If you watch my Dorian my watch recorded the temperature in the eye along with pressure. Check that one out if you haven't already.
Okay cool thanks for the info. Silly me every time there's a heat wave and I'm always wishing for a hurricane. Yuck. That would've been worse. Next time I'll pray for a blizzard lol.
Thank you Jim for another great archive video
Your welcome, I'm working on the long format version of this now that I have some free time. Irma edit will be a fascinating story about one of the strongest Hurricanes to traverse the Caribbean and Florida Keys.
@@JimEdds cant wait! I love your videos
Awesome footage as always Mr.Edds!! Thanks for sharing this with us 👍
I think you will have a busy year. Plenty of warm waters already to start the next season with. Be safe in your travels.
since I've been film Hurricanes they are more frequent and stronger so you are probably right. Even with El Nino Idalia slipped in the Gulf and amost hit me.
ooh i remember this one, cant believe its been 6 years
Irma really tore up the Caribbean Islands. Irma made 7 landfalls, two in Florida, the Florida Keys and then Naples area later that day.
This summer will be interesting! Are raindrops still small even in the stronger hurricanes? It’s my understanding that the collision-coalescence process results in smaller raindrops as opposed to the large drops from the Bergeron Process typical in thunderstorms.
Thank you for the preview Jim, was beginning to wonder if you’d ever gotten your new system and got around to working on this one. Can’t wait for the full edit, hope it shows all the stuff that was on Storm Chaser’s Guide, like when you said “I need to get out of it” shortly after you guys got down to ground level and around the corner from the stairs. It seemed like Mark’s responses helped encourage and loosen you up a bit so you could focus and better appreciate as well as enjoy the experience. I know we didn’t exactly get the whole conversation so I’ve always been curious whether not my interpretation of that moment was accurate or not.
By the way your footage of Irma is the absolute best and nastiest I’ve seen, no one else’s comes anywhere even close to it… Nothing else I’ve seen really captured the level of intensity depicted in your footage. 😎
@@CaNTBREaKCHRiS a full scale edit with voiceovers is about 285 hours of editing. Plus I want it to be different than the Curiosity Stream edit, which is really good and why HBO Max is airing it. The smaller edits are easy, The voiceover ones like Haiyan are very time consuming. The smart way to do it is do the voiceovers while you are filming then it's less work in post. I'm working on it when I have time and feel creative.
Wow thanks for finally uploading your Hurricane Irma footage.
I've got a few questions. I've watched a lot of Hurricane storm chaser footage. But I noticed they never describe how hot, cold or warm the rain and strong winds are. I always wanted to know what were the temperatures of these hurricanes? Is it a cold wind chill or warm strong winds? Oh and the storm surge 'flooding'. What's the temperature of that water too.
A really bad hurricane is typically very humid and warm. Like Dorian in the Bahamas for example. Contrast with Isabel in 2003 on the Outer Banks, NC which for me was cooler and I had to wear full pants and jacket. But all hurricane should be warm core unless than are transitioning to cold core over cooler waters. One one exception I would say is if the wind and rain have been blowing all day, you'll get cold from loss of heat. If you watch my Dorian my watch recorded the temperature in the eye along with pressure. Check that one out if you haven't already.
Okay cool thanks for the info. Silly me every time there's a heat wave and I'm always wishing for a hurricane. Yuck. That would've been worse. Next time I'll pray for a blizzard lol.
Which country guys
The clue is in the title, surely you can guess :)
😵😵
🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🤩🤩🤩🤩