
SouthFloridawx,I think the area still inside Africa is the one that GFS moves west into the Caribbean.
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boca wrote:http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod/analysis/carib/gfs/00/index_ten_m_loop.shtml
The 00GFS still has the tropical low heading west and hits a roadblock at Puerto Rico and heads northward. Climatology always wins.As someone stated last year don't trust the models past 72 hours.
SouthFloridawx wrote:storms in NC wrote:I don't know if any one knows this but the CV season is done as far as coming across the Atlantic IMO
I do enjoy reading your thoughts you post from time to time but, rarely do I see actual facts or proof regarding your info. Why do you think CV is done? Just wondering - Not trying to be mean.
caneman wrote:Take a look at the 06GFDL on this are behind the invest at end run.
http://moe.met.fsu.edu/cgi-bin/gfdltc2. ... =Animation
I have to disagree :/ The ridges that are now in place are more favourable for systems tracking west across the atlantic,compares to few days ago where anything would just get sucked out by trof after trof.GFS is picking up on some more waves rolling of africa still in it's runs.
Dean4Storms wrote:I think you be right Hyper, that looks like the area the GFS develops in a few days.
Responding to those hanging on climatology for every system this time of year turning northward and missing the states come Oct. The last few years should have been enough to prove too everyone that climatology cannot always be trusted to verify on every system every year. With such an early start this year over the CONUS with such a fall like pattern it would not be a surprise to see a return to a more summerlike pattern come Oct., what we use to call an Indian Summer here in the South. If the GFS verifies and we end up with this huge ridge in the Atlantic it could very well mean a nasty October!!
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