
EPAC basin was cooking up storms on this graphic, and the ATL was cooking up more. Any increase of TD easterly waves may lite this basin up.
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Hammy wrote:The Atlantic setup right now almost reminds me of 1998 at this point--we had continuing troughs along the EC/northern Gulf, and a few strong waves in June (which actually developed in this case) but not much east of the Caribbean until mid-July. Wouldn't surprise me given the setup to not see any more storms form until the latter third of July.
Interestingly 1998 was also a transitioning El Nino-La Nina year.
weathaguyry wrote:Never mind, I found the graphic, but anyways, shear is right around normal for this time of year, and is lower than average in the GOM, I would not give up on this season at all, there is no reason to, just because our last storm was more than a week ago
gatorcane wrote:Looking at this MJO forecast graphic, it appears the Atlantic could see a more favorable MJO as we head deeper into July while the WPAC and EPAC, where activity currently focused with favorable MJO pulses, may quiet down especially towards the end of July as more subsidence takes over.
Hammy wrote:gatorcane wrote:Looking at this MJO forecast graphic, it appears the Atlantic could see a more favorable MJO as we head deeper into July while the WPAC and EPAC, where activity currently focused with favorable MJO pulses, may quiet down especially towards the end of July as more subsidence takes over.
After seeing this graph and thinking about it, there were quite a few years over time that had a fairly quiet first half of August but picked up later (1996/98/99, most of 2002 aside from beginning and end, 2003/05/06, 2008/10) were these related to the MJO cycles?
tarheelprogrammer wrote:Hammy wrote:gatorcane wrote:Looking at this MJO forecast graphic, it appears the Atlantic could see a more favorable MJO as we head deeper into July while the WPAC and EPAC, where activity currently focused with favorable MJO pulses, may quiet down especially towards the end of July as more subsidence takes over.
After seeing this graph and thinking about it, there were quite a few years over time that had a fairly quiet first half of August but picked up later (1996/98/99, most of 2002 aside from beginning and end, 2003/05/06, 2008/10) were these related to the MJO cycles?
Quiet seasons are good for coastal communities.
WPBWeather wrote:tarheelprogrammer wrote:Hammy wrote:
After seeing this graph and thinking about it, there were quite a few years over time that had a fairly quiet first half of August but picked up later (1996/98/99, most of 2002 aside from beginning and end, 2003/05/06, 2008/10) were these related to the MJO cycles?
Quiet seasons are good for coastal communities.
That part I agree with.
ninel conde wrote:By mid august alot of other factors will be getting more negative. 6/2/1 might be way too high.
I expect pressures to continue to rise over the atlantic tropics and a huge flood of bone dry dust in aug/sept. eastpac looks super favorable in aug/sept which will increase shear even more in the atlantic. That low in se canada is the most multi-year long persistent feature i have ever seen. Winter-like pattern will become firmly established in the heart of cane season.
a- i expect another early shutdown to the season
b-no major US landfall
c-very unlikely to see a hurricane landfall
d-bone dry california winter
e-JB's high impact atlantic season prediction isnt going to pan out.
xcool22 wrote:ninel conde wrote:By mid august alot of other factors will be getting more negative. 6/2/1 might be way too high.
I expect pressures to continue to rise over the atlantic tropics and a huge flood of bone dry dust in aug/sept. eastpac looks super favorable in aug/sept which will increase shear even more in the atlantic. That low in se canada is the most multi-year long persistent feature i have ever seen. Winter-like pattern will become firmly established in the heart of cane season.
a- i expect another early shutdown to the season
b-no major US landfall
c-very unlikely to see a hurricane landfall
d-bone dry california winter
e-JB's high impact atlantic season prediction isnt going to pan out.
You May Be Right
Ntxw wrote:Personally I think the Atlantic will end up with a near normal season, more active than the past 3. The La Nina isn't developing as quickly as i would think for a hyper active season and preconditioning isn't great. However conditions are not as bad as it has been the past several years. We just have to wait for good waves to hit the open ocean first. As for landfall not even going to go there, it's all about luck and timing.
TheStormExpert wrote:Well according to ninel the season is officially over, no more storms!
Seriously though, it may not be an active season like some were expecting or hoping for, but BE WARNED! All it takes is one bad storm in the wrong place at the wrong time to change some or many peoples thoughts and views on the season.
Last year that one storm was "Joaquin" enough said!
In 2014 it was "Gonzalo" though not as bad as it could have been to earn retirement.
Hope everyone is having a Happy July 4th!
SFLcane wrote:AGAIN promets such as wxman57 says the storms are coming so I'll side with that. Ninel if today were August 25 then I might consider buying into your season cancel posts. It's been so long since we in the Atlantic have experienced a " normal season " we're the gulf and Caribbean are favorable. Numbers aren't inportant
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