Wampadawg wrote:IcyTundra wrote:EPS, GEFS, and GEPS actually suggest there will be stronger ridging later on in September
https://i.imgur.com/XrpeaBx.gif
https://i.imgur.com/T9fpytM.gif
https://i.imgur.com/J2QEfCe.gif
Ok I am really a novice so please hang with me does the above show a track open to the Texas coast for a good period or am I reading this wrong.I appreciate the teaching.
The maps I posted show the anomalies of high and low pressure across the Atlantic basin. The red on the map indicates that there is higher pressure than usual in that area and the blue on the map indicates that there is lower pressure than usual in that area. The GFS, Euro, and CMC ensembles (the models I posted) suggest that we could see stronger high pressure than usual across the Atlantic which means that anything that forms in the Atlantic would have a higher chance of getting further west closer to landmasses as the strong high pressure blocks any tropical cyclones from gaining much latitude. Right now the only thing I can see that could bring impacts to Texas anytime soon is some tropical moisture in the Bay of Campeche early next week that could increase rain chances across the Texas coast next week. Nothing suggests it will be anything major but I would expect rain chances to be decently high all across the Texas coast next week.