OntarioEggplant wrote:So the 12Z Euro has two microstorms hitting NE FL... One at 138 hrs and another at 174 hrs. There is a third weaker one at 180 hrs too.
Weirdness. GFS has been showing similar too. The massive storm at 10 days in the Gulf is still there
OntarioEggplant wrote:So the 12Z Euro has two microstorms hitting NE FL... One at 138 hrs and another at 174 hrs. There is a third weaker one at 180 hrs too.
Weirdness. GFS has been showing similar too. The massive storm at 10 days in the Gulf is still there
Yes, a really strange Euro run, indeed. In addition to the 3 teeny weeny lows you mentioned, I also see a broader 1012 mb surface low earlier coming westward to near Fort Pierce around hours 108-114! So, there are 4 different entities coming westward into FL between 9/30 and 10/3 and then moving out into the Gulf! They all form underneath the big high that camps out over the NE US. This illustrates what some of us were saying about being south of a strong surface high often actually being conducive for a low to form (due to low level convergence causing air to pile up and thus rise as JB explained). None of them may ever amount to much tropically due to shear. Most likely none of them will become a TC. However, perhaps this Euro along with the recent GFS/CMC runs is a reason that the SE US coast, especially FL, should monitor the area just east of FL for surprise tropical mischief just in case.
Even without tropical development, the Euro is showing nonstop strong onshore winds 10/1-4 for the SE US with the strongest centered on NE FL/SE GA. This run has winds just offshore as high as 40 knots just to the north of some of these microlows due to pinching of the gradient. Onshore winds actually continue into 10/6. What I'm becoming concerned about is coastal flooding near high tides in the CHS-St. Augustine corridor, especially around the full moon 10/4-6, as well as rip currents 10/1-4.