ROCK wrote:Ed Mahmoud wrote:Look at 1950 and 1999. Ok, in 1999 Bret did hit Texas, but the mother of all ridges did turn it West so fast, it almost missed.
I guess BRO and CRP are open, but my part of Texas, a perfect beach weekend summer.
And in 1950, it was either into Florida, into Mexico, or a near miss on the Carolinas. And the dry pattern suggesting a strong Texas ridge is already going strong I-10 and Southward.
ED, can you explain why your using 1950 and 1999 as your reasoning for no storms for upper Texas coast in 2008? just curious as you sound highly optimistic that Texas is in the clear....
I'm far too lazy, time challenged, and, of course, an amateur, to do my own analysis of the various indices and pick out my own analog years. Bastardi has been pushing 1949-50 as his winter analog since early Autumn, and I see it mentioned again in various discussions, and I also see 1999 mentioned.
Then I ad my own dollop of actual science, like the 3rd driest March in McAllen, TX as indication that feedback will start reinforcing a monster mean ridge in Texas, and well, it all fits.
I was in the last row in the upper deck of the Cotton Bowl, buzzing from pre-game festivities, as Texas broke a long losing streak against Oklahoma (Gardere's first of four straight wins over OU, the Cash brothers, all that), but people I know in Houston tell me they hardly new a hurricane was hitting Galveston when Jerry came ashore, it was such a weak system. But I have seen people using 1989 as an analog year.
Well, a mean ridge and a mean trough just means the average position, a storm can sneak through almost anywhere, even Texas, even this year, but I'd say the odds seem lower than normal.
BTW, as dry as it is, a close developing weak tropical storm moving into South Texas would probably be a good thing by August or September.