chaser1 wrote:Category5Kaiju wrote:0z GFS nowhere near as strong as 18z GFS, but the storm does not go OTS; rather, it seems to take one of those dreaded S-curve paths toward the Bahamas (when I say "S-curve," I refer to those paths like Andrew, Dorian, Frances, Floyd, or Donna, where the storm seems to turn north initially but then abruptly heads westward)
Specifically such type track that will likely pose the greatest risk to the SE CONUS, the Bahamas, and notably Florida this year. W. Atlantic ridge heights and especially ridge orientation will ultimately dictate enhanced landfall risk at that time. Aside from what has been a largely predominant strong mid level ridge pattern over the far W. Atlantic basin thus far, August is NOT the month the Florida Chamber of Commerce would want to be eyeballing an intensifying tropical cyclone just north of P.R.
All that I know is that you don't want a system headed NW and then forced West...nothing good ever comes from that. That is a RI pattern most of the time