ronjon wrote:GeneratorPower wrote:Janie2006 wrote:
Yah, on the one hand climatology is against Bertha making it to the US...so I remain particularly suspicious of this morning's NAM run. On the other hand, just because it's a climatological anomaly does not mean it can't happen. Needless to say, I'm quite interested in this system. Bertha has maintained a more westerly course than I had originally thought.
Not exactly. We have no storms on record this early forming where Bertha did. So at least as far as position of genesis is concerned, there is no climatology. However, it is probably time to break out the "storms passing within x nautical miles of Bertha" climatology now that it's moving farther west. We can also look at the general climatology of steering this time of year.
True that we have no storms that formed this far east but Janie is quite correct. The CLIPPER plot on the model runs reflects statistically what past storms have done in this location. This line has consistently been farthest to the east with the recurve. It would be quite anomalous for storm that formed this far east and at such a latitude to impact the US or carribean. Most recurve in the Atlantic.
"It would be quite anomalous for storm that formed this far east and at such a latitude to impact the US or carribean. "
Why would you say that? Bertha of 1996 hit NC as a CAT 2 HURRICANE and it was the furthest east a TC has formed (at that time) and it still hit land. Its ALL ABOUT THE SYNOPTICS!!!! You can talk climatology until you are blue in the face. If there is a ridge in place all the way to Bermuda with no impacts from an east coast trough, this thing WILL HIT LAND (depending on intensity). If the east coast trough weakens the ridge just west of Bermuda, this thing will recurve just west of Bermuda (again, depending on intensity). Its not that hard. Its all in the synoptics.