Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Media Heads Up—"End of An Era: Category 6 to Close Shop This Month"

Cat 6—on blogroll at right as Wunderblog—has been one of our go-to sites during hurricane season and will be missed.
From Category 6:
June 9, 2020, 7:22 PM EDT

Above: A NOAA satellite image of Hurricane Katrina approaching the Gulf Coast at 2115Z (5:15 pm EDT) on August 28, 2005. This website—just a few months old at the time, and then known as Dr. Jeff Masters’ WunderBlog—exploded in readership during the approach of Katrina. A few hours after the image above was collected, Jeff Masters warned, “I put the odds of New Orleans getting its levees breached and the city submerged at about 70%... I recommend that if you are trapped in New Orleans tomorrow, that you wear a life jacket and a helmet if you have them.” Our posts are archived in two groups: 2005-2017 and 2017-present.

After a run of 15 years, Category 6—originally Dr. Jeff Masters’ WunderBlog—will publish its final post on June 19, as The Weather Company shifts resources to other weather and climate efforts.
I’m tremendously sad to be leaving this platform and community that I have come to know and love during my five-plus years on board. When he launched this wunderground blog in 2005, Jeff established a high bar for accessible discussion of tropical cyclones, and eventually many other spheres of weather and climate. I learned a vast amount working with Jeff through his departure in the fall of 2019 (see my tribute to Jeff) and I hope I’ve met his high standards in keeping things going since then. I’ve also learned a great deal from the insights contributed by our pool of regular commenters. I am especially glad we’ve been able to give voice to the reality and gravity of human-caused climate change, and to stress society’s ability to turn the ship around—a task that’s incredibly daunting but not yet impossible.

I am also happy to announce that you will be able to follow Jeff and me at a new home. Jeff has agreed to take a new volunteer gig writing for the prestigious website Yale Climate Connections. His “Eye on the Storm” blog begins there today ("Sea-level rise likely to swallow many coastal mangrove forests") and he plans to perform his usual daily updates on Atlantic disturbances and named storms during the heat of the hurricane season. “Eye on the Storm” does not yet have a comment section, but that will get added in a few weeks (with our current moderators coming along for the ride!). The Yale Climate Connections site is transitioning to a new content management software system that will require tweaking to establish a commenting system like the current WU system.

I expect to be helping Jeff out at “Eye on the Storm” during big hurricanes, and I plan to contribute feature articles to Yale Climate Connections as well. You can also follow me on Twitter at @bhensonweather. Here's an announcement from YCC.

Weather Underground is not going away. The Weather Company, an IBM Business, which includes WU and weather.com, remains committed to advancing weather science and technology and covering the science behind climate and weather. I've enjoyed contributing to weather.com and working with my meteorologist and journalist colleagues on that excellent team over the last several years.

As you all know, there is no place quite like Category 6 in the weather world....
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