#454 Postby vaffie » Tue Sep 27, 2005 6:22 am
The following post is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org For Official Information please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
It's convection is INTENSE and FOCUSED now. At this rate, development is going to be certain and RAPID. Yikes. I'm not even back in Houston yet. What if that high pushes it towards the upper Texas coast again? What a nightmare that would be?! At this rate, though, at least, the NHC will pay enough attention to it to send an airplane into it very soon, and the models will all begin to initialize it properly so that we will have a much better idea of where and what it may do. I just do not have much faith in the idea that that cold front can pick it up--not when the cold fronts are so weak this time of year and especially this year and it is still far away enough to miss it--at most the cold front might pull it a bit more north than it would have gone otherwise, and remember that if any model would overestimate the strength of a cold front--it's the GFS, and it's just not saying it yet. Not to say that Florida should let their guard down by any means whatsoever--one never knows, but I think everyone will agree that this looks more like another unclimatological western Gulf hit, and considering the upper support it now has, the hottest water in the Atlantic basin, six days before it even gets into the Gulf, the intensity and focused nature of this morning's convection, the already dropping pressures that the NHC announced yesterday, the strong MJO in the Caribbean, and the fact that most of the models had picked up on it yesterday and even the day before, this thing could become a hurricane and even a very strong hurricane very quickly ... Sheesh, this is scary.
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