Cyclenall wrote:cycloneye wrote:Here is what Dr Jeff Masters has to say about El Nino Watch.
El Niño watch continues
Sea surface temperatures were at 0.5°C above average as of September 17 in the equatorial Pacific off the coast of South America, and have been near or above the 0.5°C above average--the threshold needed for a weak El Niño event--since the beginning of July. However, winds, pressures, and cloud cover over the region have not responded in the fashion typically associated with an El Niño, and NOAA's Climate Prediction Center (CPC) classified conditions as being neutral in their September 6 El Niño discussion. They continued their El Niño watch, and gave a 69% chance that an El Niño event will be in place by the end of September. El Niño conditions tend to decrease Atlantic hurricane activity, by increasing wind shear over the tropical Atlantic. Wind shear has been close to average over the tropical Atlantic since the beginning of hurricane season in June. However, the past few runs of the GFS model have predicted a significant rise in wind shear over the Caribbean and tropical Atlantic by early October, which may represent El Niño finally beginning to kick in and affect the atmospheric circulation over the Atlantic.
This block of text has been repeated a lot this summer. Its been the same for a long while now. The bolded part: much more wind shear in the Caribbean? It has already been hostile to begin with this whole time!!
weatherdude1108 wrote::uarrow:
It can't kick in soon enough IMO.
Yeah, we were all sweating bullets watching those weak CAT1 hurricanes thousands of miles away end up under-performing. I wouldn't mind it finishing the basin off either because I then wouldn't have to check up on it anymore every couple of days.Ntxw wrote:The PDO is colder this time go round so it will be interesting which will win out. We won't go to La Nina or cold neutral but it's still an interesting idea for the next few weeks before warming resumes.
I hope this happens, would throw everything off. The Nino 3.4 going down 0.3ºC in 1 week is a good start.
I agree with Dr Jeff Masters, shear was not that much of a problem during the season, the problem has been dry & stable air ruling the Caribbean and most of the tropical Atlantic.

