>>Huffington Post updated their tracking posts
>>Damn those tracks are going to hit the main camps of Penn State and that is not to far north and east of me.
>>BTW - I'm not in danger because I'm high up on a hill.
>>It will be rain and north of me by about 30 miles is so much higher than me (I'm 1000 feet above sea level and they are 3000 feet aove sea level) that it might result in snow and lots of snow.
>>
Update -- 09:30am EST 10/27/2012
Threat Increases for New Jersey, Metro New York, Long Island, Boston and coastal New England.
Alerts Broadcaster Update: Don't be misled into thinking the threat has eased because "Sandy" is a tropical storm. All the models show a rapidly re-intensifying storm tonight and Sunday as an approaching surge of Canadian air energizes the system; a dramatic contrast in barometric pressure producing hurricane-force winds into Monday over a broad, 200-250 mile wide arc approaching coastal Delaware, New Jersey and far southern New England. Sandy is still a force to be reckoned with, still a potentially historic storm from Cape May and Atlantic City northward to New York City and bedroom communities of coastal Long Island.
Latest models are strongly suggesting a heightened risk for New York City, Long Island, Providence, Cape Cod and the islands (Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard). The northward wobble I talked about earlier today continues, and there is now a 70-75% risk that Sandy will pass just south of New York City Monday morning.
The worst-case scenario for New York is a track just south of the city, with sustained hurricane-force southeast winds, capable of funneling water into New York Harbor and right up the Hudson and East Rivers. That scenario now looks considerably more likely than it did 12-24 hours ago. A more northward track also increases the threat for Cape Cod, the islands (Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard) and even metro Boston, which will see a strong, sustained fetch of 60-90 mph winds Monday.