Kadena's long-range forecast shows easterly 25-mph winds and 40-mph gusts along with showers and thunderstorms Thursday evening. Once Trami makes the forecast curve around Okinawa, it’s due to start tracking rapidly northeast, along the southern coasts of Kyushu and western Honshu, through central Honshu north of Tokyo and south of Misawa Air Base into the northwest Pacific Sunday into Monday. Trami should remain a fairly powerful Category 2-equivalent storm as it passes 116 miles north-northwest of Yokota Air Base at 2 a.m. Tuesday, and a fairly significant tropical storm as it rolls about 50 miles southeast of Misawa Air Base at 11 a.m. Tuesday. A thunderstorm watch is in effect until midnight and a high-wind warning from 6 p.m. Sunday to 8 p.m. Monday at Yokosuka, according to its weather portal. At least 386 flights were cancelled, mainly in western Japan, according to NHK. A typhoon is one of annoying natural disasters in Japan. ▽To beat the heat, check these tips here▽. Both U.S. bases in the Kanto Plain and Misawa are projected to be well within Trami’s 50-knot (58-mph) destructive winds bands. The latest forecast track has Trami passing 77 miles northwest of Kadena Air Base at about midnight Saturday, still packing 121-mph sustained winds and 150-mph gusts at center. In the event of 58-mph destructive winds or greater, TCCOR 1-E will be issued. Winds diminishing below 40-mph = 6 a.m. Sunday. 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 21, Guam time: Where will it go? There remains a 328-mile spread among model solutions, with the GFS ensemble still pointing to a northeast curve and the CMC ensemble favoring a straight run through Taiwan to the Chinese coast before curving northeast. Much depends on what happens in the long term, though. Tropical storm-force winds extend 150 miles northeast of center and 60 to the southwest, according to the National Weather Service on Guam. At 3 a.m., Trami was 836 miles southeast of Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, headed west at 17 mph packing 75 mph sustained winds and 92 mph gusts. Trami is likely the worst typhoon to hit Okinawa in the last six years, the last being Jelawat in September 2012. U.S. bases on Okinawa entered TCCOR All Clear at 10 a.m. local time. No upgraded TCCOR at Misawa yet. Best to prepare for the worst and hope for the best. Keep it tuned here. Here’s the latest wind-forecast timeline for U.S. bases on Okinawa, courtesy of Kadena’s 18th Wing Weather Flight: Note that 40-mph sustained winds or greater meet the criteria for upgrade to TCCOR 1-C (caution) and 58-mph sustained TCCOR 1-E (emergency), and are likely to be much greater than 40 or 58 mph. All outdoor activity prohibited. Misawa is far from out of the woods. It could retain enough intensity that it might pass just south of even Misawa Air Base as a Category 2-equivalent storm. Where it’s headed precisely, is anybody’s guess. When the power goes out, it’s horrible. Here is the latest weather picture for Sasebo . U.S. bases on Okinawa remain in Tropical Cyclone Condition of Readiness 3. Some models still project Trami to curve northeast after it tracks southwest of Okinawa, then curve northeast after grazing Taiwan’s northeast coast. All those bases remain in TCCOR 4, with upgrades to TCCOR 3 possible by afternoon. Typhoon-force winds extend 25 miles from center and tropical storm-force winds 195 miles northeast and 155 miles elsewhere, according to the National Weather Service on Guam. If Trami keeps moving as forecast, its very slow crawl north should terminate at mid-morning Thursday -- it's currently moving north at just 3 mph -- and pick up pace as the weekend nears. Although expected to pass into the East China Sea north of Formosa on 8 October, the storm unexpectedly veered north toward Okinawa. U.S. bases on the Kanto Plain remain in Tropical Cyclone Condition of Readiness 1. Forces remain in Tropical Cyclone Condition of Readiness 3. Stay tuned. A tropical storm watch is in effect for Rota, Tinian and Saipan, according to the National Weather Service on Guam. It's forecast to become a big, wide beast by the weekend, with 34-knot (39-mph) wind bands stretching from the east coast of China to just west of the Daito Islands east of Okinawa -- a good 700 mile diameter. At 10:45 a.m., 28W was 75 miles north-northwest of Guam and 1,323 miles southeast of Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, headed northwest at 15 mph with 35-mph sustained winds and 46-mph gusts. All outdoor activity is prohibited until the all clear or seasonal TCCOR 4 is issued.

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