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Everything posted by NorthHillsWx
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No dice on the rain. Hat about two straight hours of thunder though. Had dinner at a friends house near 540 (about 5 min from me) and they had had a ton of rain, water ponding in their yard and rushing down the street
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Glad there’s something else to track already. Thought for a second Fred would be interesting, but he decided to commit suicide in the mountains. 95L had had “that look” for a couple days.
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Currently 97 with a heat index of 106.3. Good grief!!! Getting some pretty good thunder at the house with storms just to my west and north, maybe I’ll get lucky?
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Seemed like all summer we had dodged the worst of the oppressive heat waves. That’s all changed last two days. This is flat out miserable stuff! Love living here but these types of heatwaves break your spirit walking outside!
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Fred’s presentation actually has improved markedly in last few hours with a large blowup of storms directly over what now looks like a vigorous llc. Does not surprise me to see some pretty good winds there and would not surprise me much if the storm was actually bit stronger than 40 kts at time of landfall
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92.7 with a heat index of 103.3… UGH!
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Fred’s circulation is actually much better defined today in visible and as noted in the 11am discussion, recon found as much. Funny how misleading the convection yesterday was. I’d say Fred is considerably better defined at this point with minimal convection than at any point yesterday. What does it mean? Not much, that center is going to be shredded. Guidance moving further and further west has large implications as well. It keeps the majority of the system inland over Haiti and Cuba. This all favors a significantly weaker scenario. If the system had crossed the Dominican Republic, or even Puerto Rico as some modeling signaled yesterday, it would have had a much better chance to strengthen with the extended period of time over the Atlantic. Now the question becomes 1) can the system survive enough to have a chance to strengthen in a couple days 2) does it go far enough west into the Gulf to be able to take advantage of bathtub water or does it ride the Florida peninsula and struggle further with land interaction? All this and the environment ahead of Fred is extremely marginal.
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Definitely going to be a situation where it will either reform or die. To your point, almost no chance the weak center survives. Also, the convection to the south is likely going to be choked off going over the mountains. This system could very easily fizzle without much ado at this point, though I think we will see some form of center reformation to the north of Hispaniola in 24 hours
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Poor Fred, about to take the worst path possible for land/mountain interaction
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Please be careful buying into specific model runs at this juncture especially as it pertains to Florida impacts. I’d focus more on large scale factors at this point considering the uncertainty of land interaction and state of the system afterwards. I will say, this one has a high ceiling especially if the models showing the decreasing shear and favorable shear vectors are correct
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Outflow looks awesome at the moment, the upper level anticyclone is really helping fan out. New deep convection keeps firing over the estimated center and this sustained convection will see pressure falls shortly. I’m convinced we have a cyclone, in visible you can clearly see what looks like a vigorous SW and SE component to low level cloud motion, and this screams to me that the fully closed circulation is there underneath the convective envelope. Further, we now have radar data and it appears to show a cyclone at this time. As for intensity, the hurricane hunters did not find TS winds, however since that time, some pockets of 40-45kt height based estimates exist, so it’s definitely on the threshold of a TS. Given the favorable upper level pattern and position in the far eastern Caribbean Sea in peak season, the short term prospects for intensification look promising. If it’s able to develop a core and mix out dry air (mid level dry air should not prevent strengthening with little shear to mix it into the circulation, assuming circulation is well established) I see no reason why this won’t be a mid-high grade tropical storm AT LEAST when it starts to interact with the Hispaniola. Not going to forecast intensity beyond there, there are too many variables, but if the circulation survives and remains vigorous regardless of wind speed, the environment becomes very favorable east of Florida.
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I can’t stand Katrina comparisons and wish pro Mets would stop trying to drum up attention for their posts. This isn’t even named and to see a Katrina comparison, even if it’s based on pattern not storm composition, is irresponsible and not helpful
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Coming into view on San Juan radar. Have to say, that looks like a cyclone to me.
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Last year most storms managed to skirt the islands or took fortuitous tracks to minimize land impact
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This system could get interesting. Latest HWRF is significantly stronger than past runs, largely due to the system missing more land masses, and brings the system a bit further north into the Bahamas. Both it and GFS have some shear issues to deal with (while the system is also interacting with Hispaniola), but if it can maintain, the environment looks much more favorable for strengthening in the vicinity of the Bahamas/se Florida coast. HWRF now brings the system almost to hurricane strength before landfall, significantly stronger than previous runs. A lot of moving pieces with this track, land interaction, and shear, but if it survives to the East coast of Florida it may have a bit higher of a ceiling. As noted above, it’s satellite appearance looks ahead of schedule for models at this juncture. ASCAT was a very sharp trough axis and it looks to be closing off as we speak, watch the last few frames of the visible satellite. Almost looks like a westward component. From my experience watching these storms, establishing a strong vortex before land interaction goes a long way for a systems survival chances. Short term intensity before it reaches Hispaniola may have greater implications down the road as to its ability to survive/possibly strengthen. Anyway, this one has my attention and is in a very favorable position for a Florida impact
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al Message from NHC Issued 9 Aug 2021 20:10 UTC NHC will initiate advisories on Potential Tropical Cyclone Six, located just east of the Lesser Antillies, at 500 PM AST (2100 UTC). Advisories being issued on PTC6 at 5pm
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We finished with 1.23” over the weekend for a monthly total of 1.44.” Currently 86.4 degrees with a heat index of 96.1 at 10 am… was nice having the cooler air while it lasted
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2021 Atlantic Hurricane season
NorthHillsWx replied to StormchaserChuck!'s topic in Tropical Headquarters
94L looks healthy this morning. Definitely the most organized look from it so far. Let’s see if it can maintain convection and continue to form a LLC today -
0.27” in the rain bucket since yesterday
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Currently 75 out mid afternoon on August 6, I’ll take it. Did get up to 86.7 before clouds and a few showers rolled through. Picked up 0.03” of rain. Feels great out now though
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63.5 low this morning, 86.7 this afternoon
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So you’ve surpassed your monthly average 4 days into the month! Wow
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Just over two tenths of an inch so far. Glad we got something, seemed to be in question earlier. High of 74.3 today. Currently 69.1, almost chilly out with the rain! What was the record cold high for RDU? Finished with 0.21”
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General Severe Weather Discussion
NorthHillsWx replied to nwohweather's topic in Southeastern States
Must be some pretty amazing waterspouts offshore of Atlantic Beach right now -
I do not believe you will be needing any rainfall for some time after this week!