here come the season cancel posts towards the end of june


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IcyTundra wrote:June CANSIPS just came out. The La Nina is stronger this run as well as slightly warmer SST anomalies in the Atlantic. Not much of a recurve signature for August-September-October.
chaser1 wrote:A silver lining? Looking at the latest CanSIPS, one "could" at least make an argument that the Northern GOM & Florida might appear to be a tad better protected by higher/stronger trending 200 mb anomolous winds forecast during peak months.
Category5Kaiju wrote:chaser1 wrote:A silver lining? Looking at the latest CanSIPS, one "could" at least make an argument that the Northern GOM & Florida might appear to be a tad better protected by higher/stronger trending 200 mb anomolous winds forecast during peak months.
The interesting thing though is if anything, the precip map trended wetter for Florida and the northern Gulf, so one might imagine that that indicates more possible TC activity forecast in that region. Mind you, this is also over the average span of 3 months. Things could look quite different if one were to look at the scale of a single month.
So, my point is….I don’t know!It’s definitely fun to speculate at this point in time, but I don’t know if we have enough concrete info at this point in time to make conclusions on which areas will be under fire and which areas will be safe this season.
chaser1 wrote:Category5Kaiju wrote:chaser1 wrote:A silver lining? Looking at the latest CanSIPS, one "could" at least make an argument that the Northern GOM & Florida might appear to be a tad better protected by higher/stronger trending 200 mb anomolous winds forecast during peak months.
The interesting thing though is if anything, the precip map trended wetter for Florida and the northern Gulf, so one might imagine that that indicates more possible TC activity forecast in that region. Mind you, this is also over the average span of 3 months. Things could look quite different if one were to look at the scale of a single month.
So, my point is….I don’t know!It’s definitely fun to speculate at this point in time, but I don’t know if we have enough concrete info at this point in time to make conclusions on which areas will be under fire and which areas will be safe this season.
chaser1 wrote:chaser1 wrote:Category5Kaiju wrote:
The interesting thing though is if anything, the precip map trended wetter for Florida and the northern Gulf, so one might imagine that that indicates more possible TC activity forecast in that region. Mind you, this is also over the average span of 3 months. Things could look quite different if one were to look at the scale of a single month.
So, my point is….I don’t know!It’s definitely fun to speculate at this point in time, but I don’t know if we have enough concrete info at this point in time to make conclusions on which areas will be under fire and which areas will be safe this season.
You make a couple of very good points however I do have a different perspective regarding one of them. I absolutely concur that in spite of what would appear as an increase in upper 200mb winds over Florida and the N. Gulf, this is a broader forecast look at the upper-level wind forecast anomaly for a 90 days period and of course cannot be viewed to determine short term conditions over a period of just a few days when a hurricane could be in a position to threaten the region. Furthermore, it could be reflective of an expanding upper-level anticyclone associated with an approaching storm interacting with mid-summer westerlies still present dipping south from the mid-Atlantic seaboard extending over N. Florida. It is in that vein that if I were to try and extrapolate the increasingly wetter forecast map while also taking the stronger broad term upper level winds forecast into account, it would suggest to me a rough delineation (or latitude) where some storms may well track and where upper level shear might begin to inhibit strengthening (or cause weakening), but also potentially enhance rainfall further south due to what could be a rich east to southeast deep layer feed caused by west tracking storms (potentially) over Southernmost Florida, the Keys, and Cuba. I could see a stark precip gradient set up along points further north due to the resultant upper-level convergent conditions as a result as well. Sure, that's an awful lot of projected extrapolations given nothing more than some long range "90- day" period anomaly forecasts. Besides, all of that doesn't begin to address the much broader picture and what I think is suggests the bigger threat to Central America and Mexico (and maybe Texas coastline). Further east developing storms may pose just as much threat to the E. Caribbean as well. On that point, it's just impossible to guess where upper-level conditions or SAL might inhibit significant strengthening and where that "sweet spot" will occur for most storms.
chaser1 wrote:A silver lining? Looking at the latest CanSIPS, one "could" at least make an argument that the Northern GOM & Florida might appear to be a tad better protected by higher/stronger trending 200 mb anomolous winds forecast during peak months.
Cpv17 wrote:With the subtropics warming so much lately, that could possibly mean more recurves, right?
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