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WxWatcher007

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Everything posted by WxWatcher007

  1. I don’t think Steve is in the let’s get hit camp lol.
  2. We have Nigel. Staying below MH will be big for the forecast, though I think I’ll end up too low with NS at this point. We’ll see. WxWatcher007 Peak Season Forecast (Aug 20-Oct 20) Named Storms: 13 (10) Hurricanes: 6 (4) Major Hurricanes: 3 (3) Emily, Franklin (MH), Gert, Harold, Idalia (MH), Jose, Katia, Lee (MH), Margot (H), Nigel
  3. Too far east as @dryslot said, weakening cane undergoing a late(ish) ET transition as @40/70 Benchmark talked about. For a big hit you need either a strong cane rocketing up the coast, or a trough interaction that provides a baroclinic assist that halts the usual unraveling a la Isaías a few years ago.
  4. Struggling so far. If it doesn’t become a major that’d be huge for my peak season forecast lol.
  5. Pretty potent low it looks like on the GFS/Euro for early next week. Another soaker?
  6. Dorian produced the greatest sunset I’ve ever seen, but this isn’t bad at all. Unedited
  7. Yeah that's what I mean too. If something develops in the W Carib I think that's homebrew even if the wave came from Africa.
  8. Hint of it on the Euro too. Given the overall pattern, any MDR stuff is getting kicked. If there are going to be any other US impacts, it'll come from a homebrew system IMO. Probably will be good for one to three between now and October 20.
  9. Final approach. Not worth hitting the road for this one, but best of luck to all the Mainers and Nova Scotia peeps.
  10. This is so good. Many of these factors are in my head whenever I’m chasing.
  11. Expected to become the fourth major of the season. Tropical Depression Fifteen Discussion Number 1 NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL152023 Issued by the NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 1100 AM AST Fri Sep 15 2023 1-min GOES-East visible imagery indicates improved organization of Invest 97, with a well-defined surface center forming since sunrise, along with large curved banding features. Thus the system is designated as a tropical depression, and the initial intensity is set to 30 kt, in closest agreement with the TAFB Dvorak classification. Our estimate of initial motion is northwestward at 10 kt, though this is uncertain due to the recent center formation. A subtropical ridge over the central Atlantic should be the dominant steering mechanism during the next several days, sending the system on a steady northwestward track. For a first forecast, guidance is in remarkably good agreement, and the official forecast lies near or west of the model consensus. Despite the good model agreement, there is still some long-range uncertainty in how far west this system moves, which partially depends on the strength of the subtropical ridge in the wake of Tropical Storm Margot. The depression is forecast to gradually intensify over the next couple of days as moderate northeasterly shear and the initial broad cyclone structure could provide a check on the intensification rate. By early next week, this system is forecast to move over near record warm sea-surface temperatures for the region in light shear conditions. It probably sounds like a broken record at this point in the season, but rapid intensification is a significant possibility, and the official forecast could be conservative below. The intensity forecast is near or above the intensity consensus, only leveling off at 120 hours due to gradual SST cooling and the possibility of eyewall replacement cycles, as suggested by the HAFS model suite. FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS INIT 15/1500Z 14.4N 43.8W 30 KT 35 MPH 12H 16/0000Z 15.5N 44.7W 35 KT 40 MPH 24H 16/1200Z 17.2N 46.0W 40 KT 45 MPH 36H 17/0000Z 18.9N 47.9W 50 KT 60 MPH 48H 17/1200Z 20.5N 49.6W 60 KT 70 MPH 60H 18/0000Z 22.0N 51.2W 70 KT 80 MPH 72H 18/1200Z 23.4N 52.9W 85 KT 100 MPH 96H 19/1200Z 26.0N 56.8W 105 KT 120 MPH 120H 20/1200Z 29.0N 60.0W 100 KT 115 MPH $$ Forecaster Churchill/Blake/Lamers
  12. I don’t think the Niño will stick around enough to disrupt next year. I don’t like going super long range, but next year looks…not good… It’s just one of those exceptionally active periods in the basin. It took a third year Nina to slow down last year and that was a low grade speed bump.
  13. We may be falling back in basketball and soccer, but Team USA tropical forecasting has come a long way. GFS needed a win after Idalia.
  14. I’ll readily admit that it didn’t stay super high end as I originally thought in terms of peak wind, but I don’t think this one disappointed. I never bought into the 900mb model runs. There was a highly unusual signal for an exceptionally strong storm and that did happen, and the RI was on par with some of the greats in the basin. The magnitude of shear was generally missed by the models, which speaks to how hard intensity forecasting is, but it was still a long track MDR major, something that’s been hard despite the incredibly active period we’ve seen. Rather than contracting the core and returning to its peak wind, the perpetual ERCs forced energy into expanding its wind field, which is top four all time and up there in IKE. That’s very hard to do IMO. On par with becoming a 5, which it had already accomplished. I know everyone loves the pretty buzzsaws and I do too, but this is an all-timer to me in its own right. Hitting a less populated area at the end of its life cycle will hurt its historical legacy.
  15. I probably missed the window to reseed now that we’re back to dry
  16. There has been another strong signal for a long track MDR hurricane, and we’re starting to see TC genesis in the basin again. Advisories are likely later today and 97L will almost certainly become Nigel this week. While everything else has bucked Niño climo this season, the prevalence of troughing/weak ridging to provide for MDR recurves has not. Future Nigel is likely only an interest to Bermuda. Discuss. Tropical Weather Outlook NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL 800 AM EDT Thu Sep 14 2023 For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico: Active Systems: The National Hurricane Center is issuing advisories on Hurricane Lee, located a few hundred miles southwest of Bermuda, and on Hurricane Margot, located over the central Atlantic. 1. Central Tropical Atlantic (AL97): Showers and thunderstorms associated with a broad low pressure area located about 1000 miles west-southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands have increased and become a little better organized since yesterday. Environmental conditions are expected to be conducive for additional development, and this system is likely to become a tropical depression during the day or so while it moves west-northwestward to northwestward at 10 to 15 mph across the central tropical Atlantic. * Formation chance through 48 hours...high...90 percent. * Formation chance through 7 days...high...90 percent. Forecaster Brown
  17. Should still be plenty impactful for Maine and NS.
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