Bonnie Advisories

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PTrackerLA
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#1101 Postby PTrackerLA » Mon Aug 09, 2004 4:53 pm

She sure is making no indications of a northward turn. The further west she gets, the further west the forecast path IMO. Louisiana might not be out of the woods yet as I've seen forecast tracks vary wildly from day-to day.
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PTrackerLA
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#1102 Postby PTrackerLA » Mon Aug 09, 2004 4:54 pm

EDIT: Sorry double post.
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The Dark Knight
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My take on Bonnie in one image...

#1103 Postby The Dark Knight » Mon Aug 09, 2004 4:58 pm

Image
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Derek Ortt

#1104 Postby Derek Ortt » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:00 pm

Water temp is not the primary concern. A mroe telling signal is oceanic heat content, which is higher in the carib and why I am much mroe concerned about that than I am the GOM
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The Dark Knight
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#1105 Postby The Dark Knight » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:00 pm

That's cool......No prob.... I've done that a lot.....LOL....
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Stormcenter
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More proof

#1106 Postby Stormcenter » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:01 pm

PTrackerLA wrote:She sure is making no indications of a northward turn. The further west she gets, the further west the forecast path IMO. Louisiana might not be out of the woods yet as I've seen forecast tracks vary wildly from day-to day.


If you need more proof that Bonnie may be more problems for the central GOM than just some wind and rain then look at this latest visible. What I see is a organizing storm that is becoming more symetrical by the hour and moving more westerly
than anything else. Who knows this baby may just end up in Mexico. You need to speed up the loop to better understand my comments.

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
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Matthew5

#1107 Postby Matthew5 » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:02 pm

Derek Bonnie is becoming better Organized over the last few hours with now a nice southern outflow forming. While at the same time the LLCC is wraping. I would not be suprized if Bonnie becomes a little stronger. As for tropical depression 3 it looks like the western band is sucking the core dry for now. So no tropical storm intill that dies in allows convection to form over the center.
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lilbump3000
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#1108 Postby lilbump3000 » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:03 pm

Right now it looks like bonnie is moving more to the W or WNW than NW. What to watch is the more west it gets the more the national hurricane center is going to shift its track futher to the west.
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Derek Ortt

#1109 Postby Derek Ortt » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:04 pm

3 is large. It ill take a while for the core to become better organized. However, often when these systems do organize, they really organize
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Good post Mathew5

#1110 Postby Stormcenter » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:04 pm

Matthew5 wrote:Derek Bonnie is becoming better Organized over the last few hours with now a nice southern outflow forming. While at the same time the LLCC is wraping. I would not be suprized if Bonnie becomes a little stronger. As for tropical depression 3 it looks like the western band is sucking the core dry for now. So no tropical storm intill that dies in allows convection to form over the center.


Good post Mathew5.
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Matthew5

#1111 Postby Matthew5 » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:05 pm

I agree stormcenter in also look at that southern outflow jet out. That is a good sign of a developing storm!
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lilbump3000
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#1112 Postby lilbump3000 » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:06 pm

Im really not buying this florida landfall. Right now the system is moving more west than anything right now.
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#1113 Postby Air Force Met » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:07 pm

IT's also not moving NW either...more at about 280. Recon will confirm this...or prove it wrong when we get the next vortex.
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#1114 Postby The Dark Knight » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:08 pm

Good point.... When the NHC makes the westward shift, I will update my track... Thanks.....
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#1115 Postby tallywx » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:10 pm

http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 66_s.shtml

This is the steering flow from Wednesday afternoon for 6 hour intervals. With such a sharp trough and strong W-E steering flow starting at this time frame, could Bonnie potentially move more westward in the short term, then move N, NE, and even E...approaching LA at first, but then bumping along the nearshore LA-MS-AL-FL coast?
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#1116 Postby corpusbreeze » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:11 pm

I have yet to see this NW motion the NHC says it is doing.
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#1117 Postby lilbump3000 » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:12 pm

Me neither corpusbreeze. Right now she is moving west to wnw but more of a west track right now. I say Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama to watch out.
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#1118 Postby southerngale » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:15 pm

History says Louisiana westward down to Mexico but the models say otherwise this time.

Image
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hurricanefreak1988
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My Bonnie lies over the Gulf

#1119 Postby hurricanefreak1988 » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:17 pm

Sorry, I just couldn't resist! :lol:

That'll most likely be the first of many corny lines associated with that :roll:

Anyway, Bonnie has a lot of pressure on her to keep the family's rich tradition going. See for yourself:

-- Since the family of Bonnies started in 1980, every Bonnie has been a hurricane.
-- Every Bonnie (except for Bonnie I) has affected land in some way (I know what you're thinking, "Bonnie III in '92 didn't affect land!" Well actually, she did. She hit the Azores Islands as a minimal TS, but the point is, she still affected land). It looks like Bonnie will keep that tradition going, though.
-- If Bonnie can survive the trip across the Southeast, the NHC is forecasting for her to bring her remnants to NC. This would be the second consecutive Bonnie to affect my home state.

Also, this doesn't have to do with her family, but it's interesting to note- if Bonnie makes it to hurricane strength, this would most likely mean that every storm so far this season has been a land-affecting hurricane. That's provided, of course, that Charley doesn't choke. Which it doesn't look like he will.
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Kennethb
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#1120 Postby Kennethb » Mon Aug 09, 2004 5:23 pm

Its early August, so hasta la vista.
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