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drezee wrote:Couple ensembles turn future Gordon into a major...like I said..high ceiling



rickybobby wrote:On wesh 2 they said Florida should keep an eye on the third wave coming off Africa. How do they know the first 2 won't be a problem for us and the third could be?


rickybobby wrote:On wesh 2 they said Florida should keep an eye on the third wave coming off Africa. How do they know the first 2 won't be a problem for us and the third could be?
rickybobby wrote:On wesh 2 they said Florida should keep an eye on the third wave coming off Africa. How do they know the first 2 won't be a problem for us and the third could be?
 I mean, there are long range broad based long range forecast tools that do look at large scale planetary atmospheric waves which may signal the synoptic patterns and their resulting impact to certain global regions where rising/sinking air or possibly increased hostile upper level winds may occur.  Still, I find it practically comical to try and guess which tropical wave yet to move off the African coastline might pose the greatest risk to impact Florida or any distant region over 4,000 miles and over 2 weeks away.  Reality is, it's Hurricane Season and naturally all of us that live on any island or land mass within a few hours distance from the coastline anywhere in the Caribbean, GOM, or North America know to keep our eyes and ears attuned to any approaching tropical area of disturbed weather.  Even our 7-10 day long range global forecast tools have to be looked at with a grain of salt.  The idea of really paying special attention to particular waves even beyond that time frame is fun for the sake of conversation but that's about it.
   I mean, there are long range broad based long range forecast tools that do look at large scale planetary atmospheric waves which may signal the synoptic patterns and their resulting impact to certain global regions where rising/sinking air or possibly increased hostile upper level winds may occur.  Still, I find it practically comical to try and guess which tropical wave yet to move off the African coastline might pose the greatest risk to impact Florida or any distant region over 4,000 miles and over 2 weeks away.  Reality is, it's Hurricane Season and naturally all of us that live on any island or land mass within a few hours distance from the coastline anywhere in the Caribbean, GOM, or North America know to keep our eyes and ears attuned to any approaching tropical area of disturbed weather.  Even our 7-10 day long range global forecast tools have to be looked at with a grain of salt.  The idea of really paying special attention to particular waves even beyond that time frame is fun for the sake of conversation but that's about it.

cycloneye wrote:00z Euro is stronger with the system that emerges Africa on day 6.
[img]https://i.imgur.com/T5RP719.gif


Sept 18 should give the residents plenty of time to stock up...we had a very strong complex come through around 2 amSootyTern wrote:We might have stuff to track all month. Today's 00z GFS has a 997 mb storm just off Miami on Sept 18. 06z has 1005 mb over PBC.



Hypercane_Kyle wrote:This a really awful 500mb height setup the 00z ECMWF is portraying; Florence goes west, and the storm in the MDR also forced westward.

rickybobby wrote:On wesh 2 they said Florida should keep an eye on the third wave coming off Africa. How do they know the first 2 won't be a problem for us and the third could be?

BobHarlem wrote:Hour +372 on the 6Z GFS, no thanks.




AutoPenalti wrote:GFS is so bi-polar sometimes, I swear.
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