gatorcane wrote:Well folks I did call for the West movement about 2 days ago and it is finally here. I did not agree with the NHC about a WNW track. The ridge and heights north of Bertha are just too strong. You can see the pronounced ridge guiding Bertha through the WV loop:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/east/tatl/loop-wv.html
Another thing I want to mention is that its rare for models about this time to show a west bend in the long-term. They almost always want to recurve or bend a system NW as it gets towards the CONUS. Part of the reason why is because of the more complex synoptic setup over the EC that typically exists.
I'm not buying a NC to New England area situation and I'm surprised anybody is considering how dead wrong the models have been for the life of Bertha. We can just monitor Bertha and anybody from the NE Leewards to Bermuda and the ENTIRE EC should be watching.
There is still plenty of time to watch Bertha. If she impacts the CONUS we are talking 8-10 days out. Alot can happen until now and then.
First off, we should always "be watching"
Having said that I totally buy that the ONLY area to watch is the NC to New England for Bertha simply due to history and experience in watching the Tropics for many years. I would be shocked if Bertha ever made it NEAR the CONUS. And even more shocked if it were of any appreciable strength if it did.
Yeah, I get surprised every once in a while but not too often.
Models or not, the odds are stacked way against Bertha affecting the CONUS short of possibly skirting the NC Outer Banks a hundred or more miles away. And I think that is a long shot too.
We will see; but I say NEVER expect the unexcepted but be ready just in case it happens......