

https://twitter.com/BenNollWeather/status/1269991318391934979
Moderator: S2k Moderators
Shell Mound wrote:There seems to be a pronounced EC trough that causes most of the activity to either a) curve OTS or b) affect land masses to the south of the U.S.
Shell Mound wrote:
There seems to be a pronounced EC trough that causes most of the activity to either a) curve OTS or b) affect land masses to the south of the U.S.
cycloneye wrote:Shell Mound, I guess if the S2K poll was still open you would have changed the numbers (Again) from the 20/13/8 ACE: 260
...the June ECMWF monthly output for September 2020 suggests a strong +NAO (hence stronger trades and higher MSLP over the MDR/Caribbean) and a lot of anticyclonic wave-breaking (AWB) due to a pronounced mid-oceanic TUTT over the central subtropical Atlantic. Note that the ITCZ is displaced well to the south of its typical location. This pattern also results in a cooler MDR vs. June 2020, including current conditions. The fact that the subtropical ridge is situated farther north due to the strong +NAO could also allow more storms to either a) curve out to sea or b) continue westward into Central America. Again, this is not a forecast, but a summary of the latest ECMWF forecast for September 2020. Nevertheless, the past several ECMWF runs have been rather insistent on cooling down the MDR/Caribbean by September 2020. How reliable is the long-range ECMWF for synoptic-level forecasting, e.g., in terms of the NAO?
SFLcane wrote:Shell Mound wrote:
There seems to be a pronounced EC trough that causes most of the activity to either a) curve OTS or b) affect land masses to the south of the U.S.
Really?What time machine are you using to look ahead 3 months from now. Steering currents are not predictable even 5 days out without much confidence.
toad strangler wrote:SFLcane wrote:Shell Mound wrote:There seems to be a pronounced EC trough that causes most of the activity to either a) curve OTS or b) affect land masses to the south of the U.S.
Really?What time machine are you using to look ahead 3 months from now. Steering currents are not predictable even 5 days out without much confidence.
Most MDR storms are going to re curve by default because that what the Atlantic Basin does normally. We ALL know that. It isn't going out on a limb to suggest this. It's the safest position one could hold.
Shell Mound wrote:
There seems to be a pronounced EC trough that causes most of the activity to either a) curve OTS or b) affect land masses to the south of the U.S.
FireRat wrote::uarrow: Holy Guacamole!!
Thats a lotta green, damn 2020 you Rat of a year, you!
Seriously though, this continues to look like one heck of a season as time goes on. We can only hope that there are good enough throughs in place to steer any Cape Verde monsters out to sea before the islands or southeast US! It will be interesting to see how the SAL is looking come August into September
SFLcane wrote:Just keeps getting better!![]()
https://twitter.com/webberweather/status/1270336893717286912