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cheezyWXguy wrote:To those of you worried about Louisiana, if it makes you feel better, I am not convinced that track makes sense. The 18z gfs plows a strengthening hurricane straight into the middle of a 500mb ridge without any influence of a trough. Seems fishy to me.
cheezyWXguy wrote:To those of you worried about Louisiana, if it makes you feel better, I am not convinced that track makes sense. The 18z gfs plows a strengthening hurricane straight into the middle of a 500mb ridge without any influence of a trough. Seems fishy to me.
Steve wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:To those of you worried about Louisiana, if it makes you feel better, I am not convinced that track makes sense. The 18z gfs plows a strengthening hurricane straight into the middle of a 500mb ridge without any influence of a trough. Seems fishy to me.
What it looks like is that little storm finds a gap and the ridge builds back over top with a pretty strong cut off or at least a deep trough down in the Rockies moving across. Might not pull it up as depicted, but you can kind of see what it’s frying to show.
MetroMike wrote:Normally in Sept tracks are to upper Gulf coast and Fl panhandle. But thats just climo. Concerned this far out that it could be a further east track than what the 18s GFS is depicting.
Steve wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:To those of you worried about Louisiana, if it makes you feel better, I am not convinced that track makes sense. The 18z gfs plows a strengthening hurricane straight into the middle of a 500mb ridge without any influence of a trough. Seems fishy to me.
What it looks like is that little storm finds a gap and the ridge builds back over top with a pretty strong cut off or at least a deep trough down in the Rockies moving across. Might not pull it up as depicted, but you can kind of see what it’s frying to show.
jasons2k wrote:Steve wrote:cheezyWXguy wrote:To those of you worried about Louisiana, if it makes you feel better, I am not convinced that track makes sense. The 18z gfs plows a strengthening hurricane straight into the middle of a 500mb ridge without any influence of a trough. Seems fishy to me.
What it looks like is that little storm finds a gap and the ridge builds back over top with a pretty strong cut off or at least a deep trough down in the Rockies moving across. Might not pull it up as depicted, but you can kind of see what it’s frying to show.
Will come down to timing. Hehe so what’s new?
This one is still unclear but after today’s trends I am thinking more towards LA versus Texas. Not that I want it here but geez I feel for your wonderful state.
IcyTundra wrote:jasons2k wrote:Steve wrote:
What it looks like is that little storm finds a gap and the ridge builds back over top with a pretty strong cut off or at least a deep trough down in the Rockies moving across. Might not pull it up as depicted, but you can kind of see what it’s frying to show.
Will come down to timing. Hehe so what’s new?
This one is still unclear but after today’s trends I am thinking more towards LA versus Texas. Not that I want it here but geez I feel for your wonderful state.
If ever in doubt on where a Hurricane will hit it is a never bad idea to guess Louisiana. I think it is too early to know much about where this could go as it today is really the 1st day the GFS has consistently been showing a TC impacting the gulf states. Last 3 GFS runs 06z Bolivar Peninsula landfall, 12Z Matagorda Bay landfall, and 18Z Central LA landfall too early to have a trend in modeling.
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