#29 Postby Patrick99 » Sat Jul 01, 2006 8:54 pm
This is obviously just speculation, but I'm kind of leaning toward this season being a non-event. I like experiencing hurricanes, but I doubt I will this year.
Starting last fall and continuing through the winter, spring, and early summer, it seems to me that there have been many troughs, rather strong and progressive ones at that. The oceanic high pressure areas don't look like they have been holding particularly strong this year, because there's always some new trough or front blasting through. In 2004 and to some extent 2005, the Bermuda high had a death grip on our weather for weeks, sometimes months at a time, even in winter and spring.
Troughing doesn't look like it's abating, though obviously that could change. At any rate, the chances to me seem slim that any long-tracking storm will traverse the Atlantic this year and hit Florida or get into the Gulf.
It will be interesting to see, however, if this tendency toward disturbed weather near the Bahamas continues. It was obviously a big part of last year's season, stuff getting together there, and then a little high pressure builds in and kicks it west. Doesn't take much for something to hit FL or get into the Gulf, if that's where they form.
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