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ronjon wrote:The 18Z NAM indicates low pressure developing off the coast of Columbia and generally moving N-NW over the next 84 hrs. The model has indicated this cyclogenesis now for the last two days. The NAM is generally a poor performer as it generates lots of phantom lows in the SW carribean. I think this time its on to something as I see a small CC low moving off the coast of eastern Panama near 11N-77.5W. It doesn't have much convection now. If the winds aloft relax a bit more, this will be something to watch over the next several days.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... loop.shtml
wxman57 wrote:Every year it's the same thing in May/June. Model runs hint at possible development east of Nicaragua because of the naturally lower pressure there and slight increase in convection. Most of the time, the models are wrong. We may go another 2 months without the first tropical storm of the season.
AJC3 wrote:I will say this...after a quick look at the 00Z ECM/06Z GFS, the height falls beginning around day 5 in the GOMEX are an important change in the pattern for Florida - though not necessarily for TC formation. It's the first time this spring that I've seen a synoptic setup that could bring deep tropical moisture - PWAT on the order of 2 inches - up across most if not all of the state. Would make for a widespread convective event, possibly producing significant rainfall over a large area - something we need badly down here to start to put a dent in the drought conditions which have plagued the state for so long.
Now...having said that. let's wait a few days and see if we can get a day 2-3 forecast from the models that looks reasonably close to what the current guidance is suggesting.
You mean second, right? Andrea was technically the first.wxman57 wrote:Every year it's the same thing in May/June. Model runs hint at possible development east of Nicaragua because of the naturally lower pressure there and slight increase in convection. Most of the time, the models are wrong. We may go another 2 months without the first tropical storm of the season.
Extremeweatherguy wrote:You mean second, right? Andrea was technically the first.wxman57 wrote:Every year it's the same thing in May/June. Model runs hint at possible development east of Nicaragua because of the naturally lower pressure there and slight increase in convection. Most of the time, the models are wrong. We may go another 2 months without the first tropical storm of the season.![]()
Extremeweatherguy wrote:I just did some quick research, and since 1995 (the start of the current active cycle), we have only had two seasons that didn't feature a named storm until August (2000 and 2004). Based on that, it seems like long term averages may actually not really apply to the current cycle we are in. Over the past 12 years, we have seen TC development before June 83% of the time. That is a pretty high percentage, IMO.
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