NYR__1994 wrote:I think a lot of people are missing the forest for trees....
The model guidance is pretty tightly clustered at the 5-6-7 day range considering we are looking that far ahead. They are all predicting a left turn somewhere around the southern tip of the Florida Penninsula...If we were looking at a track 6 days out that was headed straight for the coast that would be the difference between a Jacksonville and Savannah landfall. With the angle of attack this storm is expected to take, a difference in 75 miles (nothing in a 5 day forecast) is the difference between riding up the east coast or west coast of Florida with impacts up the eastern seaboard or inland to Pensacola/Tallahasee.
While this is not a technical post (I will leave those to the experts) the bottom line is this storm has been very well modeled and forecasted by the NHC. On that note, I am extremely curious to see where the final forecast point is at the 11:00 update, seeing how it hasn't moved for the last 3-4 updates...
I agree. I think Florida's unique geography makes the spread in the models seem larger than it actually is this far out. I'm seeing a narrative that there's a large spread in the models 5 days out, and I'm thinking, compared to Matthew last year, and other troubling storms in recent years, the models are relatively consolidated.