Lots of debate about where's Bertha going overnight and the cause of the current rapid west movement. Will it continue? Let's take a look at the steering currents as depicted by the latest GFS and see if we can see why Bertha has accelerated westward in the past 24 hours:
First, the mean 700mb-400mb wind flow (about 10,000-20,000 ft) across the Atlantic valid right now (10am CDT Sun). As you can see, it's passing right beneath a high center, resulting in a tight east-west wind gradient. That's the reason for the acceleration. But look just to the west and you'll see that the gradient drops off very rapidly later today as Bertha approaches the weakness in the ridge along the TUTT axis.

Now let's look 96 hours out to 10am CDT Thursday and see what the steering currents look like. I've plotted Bertha's 96hr position on the map. Look at that trof digging down along the East U.S. Coast and the position of the Bermuda high northeast of Bertha. A perfect opportunity to recurve out to sea. And for those of you concerned about Florida, not the big "H" sitting over Florida. So if the GFS is even close to being right, the odds of a Florida landfall are slim and chances are, Bertha will begin making the turn north in about 4 days.
Of course, this all assumes that the GFS forecast is good. It seems to have done a good job with Bertha so far, so I see no reason to totally discount it.
