Meteorological history of Hurricane Shary (2010)

Hurricane Shary was designated first on September 14 off the coast of Jamacia, seeing as a tropical depression, Models had predicted a major hurricane, but just to make a breif Category 1 landfall in Cuba, the storm had very little wind shear at the start of its life cycle, but it would increase, The storm lost alot of winds after making a Category 4 Landfall in the Yucatan, as it crossed the Gulf at speeds up to 35 MPH, as it made a quick Category 3 landfall in Florida, due to the fast pace of the storm, damage in Florida could have been much worse if it stayed on land for more, but the damage in Florida was already extensive, it hurrled off the coast of Florida, moving at speeds up to 50 MPH off the coast, making high rip tide on most of the Easterm United States, Wind shear increased drastically as it headed north, Through its life cycle, Hurricane Shary was the cause of many warnings and watches, taking the record for the highest warnings put for a single cyclone in the NHC history of recording cyclones in the Atlantic Basin, its peak winds off the coast of Florida was 125 MPH, the same speed at its landfall, the storm had weakned drastically off the coast of Canada.