at it's strongest point, a category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 145 mph. at the time it made landfall in Texas, a category 2 hurricane with sustained winds of 110 mph.
Hurricane Charley was at the strong end of category 4 with 150 mph winds.
As of August 21, 2012 Isaac is not a hurricane yet, still just a tropical storm.
Hurricane Ike, which hit Texas on September 23, 2008 as a strong category 2 hurricane with a storm surge equivalent of a category 5 hurricane. The storm caused approximately 20 billion dollars in damage.
hurricane ike enden on the 8th of september 2008
Missouri was affected by the remnants of Hurricane Ike. Missouri can get hurricane remnants, but not actual hurricanes.
Hurricane Mitch was a category 5 hurricane.
The Ike Hurricane began on September 1, 2008 and finished September 16, 2008.
Hurricane Ike is a category 4 hurricane.
Yes. Hurricane Katrina was a category 5 hurricane with peak winds of 175 mph. Hurricane Ike was a category 4 hurricane with peak winds of 145 mph.
The last hurricane to hit Texas, Hurricane Ike, was a strong category 2 at landfall. Earlier it had reached category 4 strength while over the Atlantic.
Hurricane Ike, which hit Texas on September 23, 2008 as a strong category 2 hurricane with a storm surge equivalent of a category 5 hurricane. The storm caused approximately 20 billion dollars in damage.
No. Ike came after Katrina. Hurricane Katrina was in 2005. Ike was in 2008.
Yes. Hurricane Ike dissipated in 2008.
The next Atlantic hurricane after Ike was Kyle. However, the next named storm after Ike was Tropical Storm Josephine, which did not reach hurricane strength.
hurricane ike enden on the 8th of september 2008
No. Hurricane Ike formed and dissipated in 2008, nearly 4 years ago.
The Government was the blame for Hurricane Ike cause there was no actual villian
Missouri was affected by the remnants of Hurricane Ike. Missouri can get hurricane remnants, but not actual hurricanes.
yes