The Navy Site (http://nlmoc.navy.mil/home1.html)
The Navy Site is one of the hurricane tracking sites we have used and trusted for years. It isn’t actually called the Nave Site, it’s technical name is Naval Maritime Forecast Center – Norfolk. It has an URL address that is also virtually impossible to remember, so it is more convenient to use the handy link we have provided. The Nay site is what I would call a no frills site. When you go to the site you will get a page that looks like this:
If you will look for the poorly drawn circles we made (it is not easy to draw a circle with a mouse) you will find a link called “Tropical Cyclone”. When you click on that link you will get a page with information about current storms in the region. To see the Navy track of a storm you need to click on the link that will say “Graphic”. That will open up a page that will give you a very easy to understand graphic of where the Navy thinks the storm is going. This site doesn’t display a cone of uncertainty. Since the Navy has a lot of interest in where the storm goes, they are pretty good at hurricane tracks. You can also find their projection of wind speed at various times along the track. The Navy site is one that we always check frequently during the course of the storm. Just a side note, while no one is right 100% of the time about the track of a hurricane, both times the Navy site has forecast a hurricane to track over our house, it has. As long as this site isn’t pointing at us, it is one of our favorites!


