Tropical Storm Beryl
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- terstorm1012
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Beryl should continue to strengthen for the next 4-5 hours as it's crossing the warm waters of the Gulf Stream. However, weakening will occur early Thursday as Beryl encounters an area of high wind shear and begins to deal with cooler SST's.
Beryl should continue it's northward track through the rest of today, speeding up a bit before making a northeastern turn on Thursday due to an approaching trough of low pressure from the west. The intensity of this trough will be the deciding factor of how close Beryl comes to the New England coastline. Possible landfall some where near Long Island or Cape Cod on Friday is still not out of the question, but the NHC track shows Tropical Storm Beryl turning just south of New England.
Beryl should continue it's northward track through the rest of today, speeding up a bit before making a northeastern turn on Thursday due to an approaching trough of low pressure from the west. The intensity of this trough will be the deciding factor of how close Beryl comes to the New England coastline. Possible landfall some where near Long Island or Cape Cod on Friday is still not out of the question, but the NHC track shows Tropical Storm Beryl turning just south of New England.
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- abryant.ma
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Trugunzn wrote:anybody check out the new gfs that came out.
http://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/gfstc2.c ... =Animation
It shows like a weak huricane hitting long Island
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- wxwatcher91
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- Extremeweatherguy
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That is why I am scarred about what August through October will bring. I have a feeling that we will see an overall less active season than 2005, but a similar landfall season.HURAKAN wrote:So far this season has provide us we two good looking storms, nothing wimpy!!!
BTW: It is also interesting to note that both of these first 2 storms will have affected land.
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- cheezyWXguy
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the GFS shows nothing even remotely close to a hurricane hitting New England. I really do not understand where that conclusion was arrived at. GFS shows little change in intensity before landfall... and the latest recon data indicates that we have a 45KT storm now as the winds were weaker than the previous pass, so this is not intensifying and has likely peaked
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