It's becoming a stuck record to say wait till next week or next month, but regardless of how tired we are of hearing it we simply do not know what will happen yet.
I would like to see some inactivity records fall.

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tolakram wrote:We can realistically only see a week ahead with any accuracy.
It's becoming a stuck record to say wait till next week or next month, but regardless of how tired we are of hearing it we simply do not know what will happen yet.
I would like to see some inactivity records fall.
hurricaneCW wrote:If this season is going to suck then might as well set some records. I'm all for the latest hurricane record, the gfs really backed away from developing the Cape Verde wave.
The gfs does show a lot of little systems developing, which we would have to keep an eye on as weaker systems are more likely to get farther west. There is also more ridging expected in the west Atlantic for next week so it'll be interesting.
It's also quite possible that October could be the most dangerous month this season as the focus will be in the very high heat content waters of the Western Caribbean where monsters like Mitch, Gilbert, and Wilma traversed (two of those in October).
CrazyC83 wrote:
The MDR is such a graveyard this year (they can't even survive to the subtropics with any kind of clouds or circulations) the best hope will likely need to come from non-tropical sources, such as dying cold fronts and troughs.
wxman57 wrote:I suspect that one main culprit this year across the entire Northern Hemisphere is mid-level dry air. Take a look at the analysis of July-August 400mb (20,000 ft or so) specific humidity. This dry air extends from just below 500mb (18,000ft) upward to above the 400mb level. NH ACE is less than 50% of normal this year.
http://home.comcast.net/~cgh57/dryair.gif
http://home.comcast.net/~cgh57/dryair2.gif
wxman57 wrote:You can generate your own graphics for any parameter, any month, year, etc., here:
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/cgi-bin/data/composites/printpage.pl
galaxy401 wrote:Wxman that reasoning does make a lot of sense on why there are a lack of powerful storms. Does anyone know what causes the higher than normal mid level dry air?
Ptarmigan wrote:galaxy401 wrote:Wxman that reasoning does make a lot of sense on why there are a lack of powerful storms. Does anyone know what causes the higher than normal mid level dry air?
Interesting about the dry air. I know for Atlantic, it comes from the Sahara. I wonder for Pacific.
CrazyC83 wrote:hurricaneCW wrote:If this season is going to suck then might as well set some records. I'm all for the latest hurricane record, the gfs really backed away from developing the Cape Verde wave.
The gfs does show a lot of little systems developing, which we would have to keep an eye on as weaker systems are more likely to get farther west. There is also more ridging expected in the west Atlantic for next week so it'll be interesting.
It's also quite possible that October could be the most dangerous month this season as the focus will be in the very high heat content waters of the Western Caribbean where monsters like Mitch, Gilbert, and Wilma traversed (two of those in October).
Heck, even November could be memorable. Having no activity into midseason would increase the SST's and heat content even more as there would be no upwelling.
ronjon wrote:All this talk of no hurricanes is a bunch of hooey. Late season will be active based on analog years where the first hurricane formed late in the season. I see the Euro is building 500 mb ridging in the 7-10 day time frame over the SW Atlantic with the east coast trough retrograding west to the central GOM.
Hammy wrote:This year is looking like a repeat of 2007 (albeit with more storms) if you exclude the two majors we had in Dean and Felix; unfavorable conditions throughout and a spat of short-lived storms.
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