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Boston Bulldog

Meteorologist
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Everything posted by Boston Bulldog

  1. Several VHTs rotating around the tiny core on IR sat… wild turn of events this morning
  2. Really makes you wonder what recon would have gotten if they flew into Eta at it's peak. Somehow T numbers were higher than Milton's for a brief period there
  3. Code Red, might be time to fire up a thread on this. Nasty looking PRE setup. Regardless of how strong this system gets, this is a really concerning situation for an already flooded FL Gulf Coast. Good to see the NHC starting to push out some messaging for coastal residents to prepare.
  4. NHC agrees, but take the under on daybreak! Kirk has already arrived as a MH!
  5. Isaac just popped an eye. Hurricane at 5am most likely. These mid-latitude systems always have great structure
  6. Eyewall is starting to look “bumpy” on radar. Plenty of mesovorts starting to emerge, Helene is really tightening up the core now
  7. Notable improvement on IR. As a whole the core looks a lot more robust and less hollowed out than just a few hours ago…
  8. While John has dissipated, the rain has not. Very bad situation unfolding in Oaxaca and Guerrero states, regardless if Zombie John re-emerges like the NHC says it has a 50% chance of doing
  9. Data will often be noisy in a chaotic environment. This is why many different measurements are needed for official statistics. I would recommend saving yourself from eye strain from obsessing over each datapoint, and look at overall trends in pressure
  10. Man this thing is a behemoth, look at that gigantic outer band draped over Jamaica. These CAG storms can bring quite the vorticity payload as they head north. Major rossby wave perturbations likely downstream as Helene rots in the mid-latitudes. I haven’t looked, but this would likely be a “reshuffle the deck” situation for the extratropical circulation across the N-ATL and Europe
  11. Giving any serious consideration to Hurricane models before a center of circulation has formed is totally foolish. HAFS at 12z had this thing already vertically stacked by this time
  12. Fascinating and dynamic satellite view of the Western Gulf tonight. Look at that circulation around 27N start to accelerate south and get pulled closer to the wave axis
  13. Powerful ET transitions are rare on radar and wow what a slug of moisture heading for the Avalon Peninsula. Interesting to see all the frontal features becoming more dominant in real time. Big time fronto-band fueled by deep tropical moisture heading for St John's. That's gonna pack a punch.
  14. Quite the burst of convection that managed to rotate upshear and around the center. I would expect another burst on the eastern side of the center soon. You can see dry air getting ingested to the south via the northwesterly shear - it is trying to rotate into the center around 69W 22N. The inner structure of the core is a bit of a mystery right now due to the lack of new microwave passes, let's see if Ernesto can wall off the dry air
  15. ACE is 304% of the mean to date. Take a deep breath. Current intensity is basically directly in line with forecasts from yesterday morning. Not every storm rapidly intensifies into a CAT-4 in 24 hours once reaching a “favorable” environment - not to mention there is dry air nearby as forecasted. Lots of fluff and emotional reactions today in this thread. Let’s figure it out people
  16. Ernesto is absolutely flying West and needs to get out of this rapid easterly flow before it can organize quickly. Once it begins to lift north and exit the zonal flow, Ernesto should start taking advantage of its environment and anomalously warm waters and begin intensifying. SHIPS indices show a 46% chance of RI around hour 72 which gives additional credence to the near unaminous deepening we see from model outputs over the Sargasso Sea. Do I think 72 hours out is a bit out of the range for the SHIPS? Sure, especially since statistical models like it are not based in NWP methods, but they are a good indicator of what the environment may look like at that time. Seen a lot of Fiona thrown around here, idk I'm getting Gonzalo (2014) vibes from this. Perhaps a bit farther west than Gonzalo through the islands.
  17. None of that shows a closed vortex at the low levels as I cannot see low level westerlies. There is some mid level spin present, but no indication of a TC at this time. Satellite imagery, especially IR satellite, can play tricks
  18. Long ways to go people, once cyclogenesis occurs we can actually glean some insight into land interaction near the Caribbean. The long term prospects on this system are still a crapshoot. Only insight I can feel confident in is that generally next week doesn't have a synoptic pattern that screams quick recurve due to the possibility of a weak trough over the E US and weaker westerlies (given climatology). Of course these chess pieces are being modeled in fantasy land, ride with the ensembles for now. I think Webb had a great explanation on this.
  19. Getting crushed in the Upper East Side. Big gust of wind accompanied its arrival
  20. SSMIS does suggest that there is indeed westerly shear impacting the core already. Lots of convective activity in the east eyewall, can Beryl wrap it upshear and rebuild out west?
  21. Still some time for Beryl to take advantage of low shear. A bit outdated considering the 21Z timestamp, but still anomalously low shear values over and near the storm. The quickening easterlies (causing a Westerly shear direction) and the TUTT will begin to erode it significantly more tomorrow.
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