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WxWatcher007

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Everything posted by WxWatcher007

  1. Yeah, for now at least. Euro is faster with intensification after landfall but guidance has been waivering back and forth on that.
  2. Joaquin or Hermine? If it missed I don’t remember it
  3. Gotta wonder if there will be a reformation after landfall.
  4. Well the Euro keeps Atlantic Canada on the table. Still worth watching closely there.
  5. I remember exactly where I was as Charlie underwent RI before landfall. It was jaw dropping as a kid watching TWC. Yeah, there’s the larger synoptic piece—thinking of an example like Henri and Florence where the guidance and climo heavily favored OTS and things gradually changed…and then there’s the “mesoscale” piece—like today when Harold literally reformed it’s center to the north and developed a partial eyewall just after recon barely could find a closed low and left the system. There are many obvious cases to Ray’s point. If there isn’t a big ULL over the Great Lakes I can be highly confident nothing’s coming to my backyard, but for the Carolinas to Texas, there are a number of different pathways to get hit and intensity forecasting remains one of the hardest spaces in meteorology, even 6-12 hours out. Ian is a great and terrifying example of that.
  6. Post Floyd, it had basically been misses until Irene for here, which was highly damaging across much of the state but underperformed relative to the forecast even 48 hours out. If there’s one dominant theme I see across this site it’s folks being way too sure about how any given system turns out. If there’s anything I’ve learned tracking and now chasing tropical, it’s that you work the uncertainty questions until there’s a rock solid answer. If you look at the legacy threads—you’ll see a lot of early (or late) declarative statements that end up wrong. Myself included. I just try to learn any chance I get.
  7. I was too young. For whatever reason Bonnie was the one that was my baptism by fire. Floyd was minor in the whole scheme of things, but I remember the wind swaying the trees during outdoor gym class and cutting the power at my school. I was already hooked on tropical, but that was the first direct tropical experience I can remember and it was the greatest thing ever for me.
  8. Honestly it’s barely worth tracking tropical if someone is looking for NE impacts. Casual eyes and weenie fodder between July and September. At least October has been a consistent hybrid producer recently.
  9. Harold packing a good little punch today. Multiple tornado warnings, aerial/surge flooding, and some strong winds even after landfall.
  10. Steering pattern just doesn’t look conducive for a strike after DR/Haiti and maybe Bermuda. Just discussing though—I still believe we need to get this out of the Caribbean to see what eventual long term track looks like as it moves north.
  11. I don’t know why I allowed myself to believe that there could be a reconciliation with winter after the last basically decade of misery (lived in DC for part of the stretch). Winter and I are divorced for good. Of course I’ll take action and will chase something high end, but I’m done breathlessly tracking and patiently waiting. Done.
  12. Significant shift east on the guidance so far today away from direct Atlantic Canada impacts.
  13. I wouldn’t be posting this much if I weren’t home sick Tropical Storm Franklin Discussion Number 8 NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL082023 1100 AM EDT Tue Aug 22 2023 It is unclear this morning if Franklin still has a well-defined center of circulation. Visible satellite images suggest that broad low-level turning is occurring well to the west of the bulk of Franklin's deep convection, and there is no clear evidence that a center exists near, or that a new center if re-forming beneath, the convection. It appears that scatterometer will miss Franklin and be of no help in assessing the wind field, but a NOAA Hurricane Hunter aircraft is scheduled to investigate the system later this afternoon. For now, the initial intensity is held at 45 kt, which is right in the middle of the various subjective and objective satellite estimates. If Franklin does still have a center, it is assumed to have jumped or re-formed a bit to the west where there is new convection. This position gives the storm an overall motion over the past 12 hours toward the northwest (325 degrees) at 6 kt. Franklin is positioned within the southern extent of a large mid-level trough, which includes a mid-/upper-level low centered south of Bermuda. While the steering flow is weak, this should cause Franklin to move slowly northward and then northeastward for the next 4 days or so. By day 5, a new shortwave trough is likely to develop over New England, with ridging strengthening over the central Atlantic, and Franklin is forecast to turn back toward the north at that time. Largely because of the adjustment in the initial position, all of the track guidance has shifted westward on this cycle. The NHC track forecast has also been moved westward, although it is on the eastern side of the guidance envelope and fairly close to the typically-reliable HCCA consensus aid. That said, there is greater-than-usual uncertainty in Franklin's forecast track given potential re-formations of the center. Moderate-to-strong westerly shear is expected to continue over Franklin for the next 4 days or so. In addition, the system is forecast to move over the rugged terrain of Hispaniola within the next 24-36 hours. As a result, little change in strength is anticipated before Franklin reaches Hispaniola, and some weakening is likely while it is crossing the island. Some intensification is then noted in the 3-5 day period when environmental conditions begin to become a little more conducive for strengthening. The NHC intensity forecast is near the HCCA and IVCN consensus aids for much of the 5-day forecast period. KEY MESSAGES: 1. Heavy rainfall from Franklin is expected across portions of Puerto Rico and Hispaniola into Thursday. The heavy rainfall may produce areas of flash and urban flooding as well as river rises and mudslides. Across Hispaniola, significant and potentially life-threatening flash flooding is possible Tuesday into Wednesday. 2. Franklin is expected to bring tropical storm conditions to portions of the Dominican Republic and Haiti, where Tropical Storm Warnings are in effect, beginning later today and continuing through Wednesday. FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS INIT 22/1500Z 15.5N 71.1W 45 KT 50 MPH 12H 23/0000Z 16.5N 71.3W 50 KT 60 MPH 24H 23/1200Z 18.3N 70.9W 45 KT 50 MPH...S COAST OF DOM REPUB 36H 24/0000Z 20.4N 70.2W 40 KT 45 MPH...OVER WATER 48H 24/1200Z 22.1N 69.3W 40 KT 45 MPH 60H 25/0000Z 22.9N 68.2W 45 KT 50 MPH 72H 25/1200Z 23.3N 67.1W 50 KT 60 MPH 96H 26/1200Z 24.2N 66.3W 60 KT 70 MPH 120H 27/1200Z 27.1N 67.1W 70 KT 80 MPH $$ Forecaster Berg
  14. Spot on. We’ve had our windows and have produced, but the impact has been marginal relative to what we could do. We had a lot of those systems weaken substantially on approach, and even though some have been high impact, we haven’t really seen a big widespread deal. It’ll happen eventually, but a lot has to go right (or wrong) for the perfect storm. Turning to the basin, Harold has ramped up quickly but ran out of runway. Get a real Gulf system this year and it’ll be trouble, again…
  15. Look at that pressure fall. These quick spin ups are always fascinating.
  16. Quickly building an eyewall just offshore. Runway to take off is almost gone, though.
  17. Harold looking pretty robust as landfall approaches
  18. Pretty potent look rolling up on the coastline. Good job by the models to show this evolution without overdoing it.
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