#144 Postby revjohn » Mon Jun 02, 2025 3:45 pm
I’ve been watching this setup evolve for about 3 weeks now — not just this week’s model runs. The progression of the MJO phase, the consistent warm SST anomalies, and the potential for a CAG-type genesis have all been lining up toward this early-June window. This isn’t something that suddenly appeared — it’s been developing in the background, and now we’re seeing the models start to reflect that timing.
I’m running an synthesis of the current model trends (raw GFS, GEFS, ECMWF EPS, SST anomaly fields, MJO phase, and steering pattern forecasts). Here’s where the data stack is pointing as of today’s 18z guidance:
Genesis potential remains high (~65%) in the western Caribbean → southern Gulf between June 7–9.
MJO phase is progressing on time, and SSTs are highly favorable across the region (+1.5 to +2.0 C anomalies).
Wind shear is dropping into a favorable range (<15 kt forecast in the western Gulf during the key window).
The deterministic GFS continues to run “hot” and unstable — swinging wildly between NE Gulf and W Gulf tracks — but this is not reflected in the ensemble means:
EPS and GEFS ensemble means still favor a WEST track — toward the NE Mexico / Deep South Texas corridor.
There is no consistent ensemble support for the recent “fantasy” major hurricane runs or sudden NE pulls.
Steering pattern (subtropical ridge) remains strong and west-centered in the critical window (~June 9–12), which supports a W/NW track into the western Gulf.
Upper trough depth does not appear sufficient to force a NE escape at this point.
Key risk to watch — if a system does track into the western Gulf under the current modeled ridge setup, dual ridge blocking/stalling becomes a legitimate concern → this is a far more meaningful risk to monitor than the precise landfall point being chased by deterministic runs.
Summary as of today’s data:
→ Development very plausible (~65% chance).
→ Track remains WEST-favored — NE Mexico / Deep S TX corridor still primary.
→ Deterministic GFS volatility is expected — ensemble guidance is stable — no eastward shift justified yet.
→ Stalling risk is real IF western Gulf landfall occurs.
I’ll be watching tonight’s EPS cycle closely → if that ridge structure holds, WEST remains the best-supported solution going into mid-June.
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