ATL: BERYL - Post-Tropical - Discussion
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- StPeteMike
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
I would not be surprised to have a Cat 5 by tomorrow morning. Nothing is in the way to prevent this small but mighty girl from exploding in strength until getting closer to south of Hispaniola.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
At this point do you think warnings can be lifted in Barbados. It seems to be even further south and no great impact to us
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
StPeteMike wrote:I would not be surprised to have a Cat 5 by tomorrow morning. Nothing is in the way to prevent this small but mighty girl from exploding in strength until getting closer to south of Hispaniola.
It could very easily undergo an EWRC anytime within the next 12-18 hours.
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I am only a meteorology enthusiast who knows a decent amount about tropical cyclones. Look to the professional mets, the NHC, or your local weather office for the best information.
- Hypercane_Kyle
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Completely unprecedented territory here for both June and July.
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My posts are my own personal opinion, defer to the National Hurricane Center (NHC) and other NOAA products for decision making during hurricane season.
Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Weatherwatcher2018 wrote:At this point do you think warnings can be lifted in Barbados. It seems to be even further south and no great impact to us
Absolutely not. We will have sustained winds of 70 mph with gust. A y shift in the track can bring this closer.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Weatherwatcher2018 wrote:At this point do you think warnings can be lifted in Barbados. It seems to be even further south and no great impact to us
Barbados will feel affects of Beryl even if it moves further South than was forecast. A wobble Northward can make a lot of difference. This is why the watches and warnings remain in effect until the storm passes your longitude.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Question for someone who knows climo very well (I'm sure Larry could chime in here)- prior to Beryl breaking the record today, what was the earliest date of a category 4 hurricane east of the Windward Islands? I was thinking Allen in early August, but I'm not sure.
And to further put Beryl in perspective- what's the date of the (former) earliest category 4 in the MDR to form east of 55W?
And to further put Beryl in perspective- what's the date of the (former) earliest category 4 in the MDR to form east of 55W?
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Beef Stew wrote:Question for someone who knows climo very well (I'm sure Larry could chime in here)- prior to Beryl breaking the record today, what was the earliest date of a category 4 hurricane east of the Windward Islands? I was thinking Allen in early August, but I'm not sure.
And to further put Beryl in perspective- what's the date of the (former) earliest category 4 in the MDR to form east of 55W?
Re: Allen pretty sure it hit the Windwards as a Cat 3 so it wasn't the earliest to hit the Windwards as Cat 4 because it didn't manage to achieve that to begin with.
Edit: So if we are including the definition of the Windward Islands per Wikipedia which is Dominica through Grenada. There actually is only 1 hurricane that I can find that has ever actually hit these islands as a Category 4 or higher (if we are excluding the 1780 Great Atlantic Hurricane which isn't in the official records as they began in 1851 but probably was in that range when it hit that area but that was in October so still not a contender) and that is Maria in 2017. So I guess that's your answer.
As far as east Category 4 goes I think it is the 1899 San Ciriaco hurricane which got Cat 4 east of the Windwards on August 7? But didn't directly impact those and instead hit the Leewards.
Edit 2: Forgot about David in 1979 which would've made landfall on Dominica as a Cat 4 on August 29, 1979. So that is the correct answer for earliest strike on the Windwards not Maria.
Last edited by Xyls on Sun Jun 30, 2024 12:21 pm, edited 7 times in total.
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- TheWisestofAll
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
alan1961 wrote:Some dry air in its path
[url]https://i.ibb.co/gPNR4ZX/Screen-Hunter-08-Jun-30-16-17.gif [/url]
that band running before the core should protect it from the dry air.
[url]https://i.ibb.co/t2JcZH1/Satellite-No-Radar-20240630-T161500-0100.jpg [/url]
afaik it's rare for dry air to penetrate a core once it's become established as such.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
alan1961 wrote:Some dry air in its path
[url]https://i.ibb.co/gPNR4ZX/Screen-Hunter-08-Jun-30-16-17.gif [/url]
that band running before the core should protect it from the dry air.
[url]https://i.ibb.co/t2JcZH1/Satellite-No-Radar-20240630-T161500-0100.jpg [/url]
Beryl has coughed out any and all dry air that she has recently ingested on her way to CAT 4 status. To reach CAT 4 and is such a remarkable amount of short time everything needs to go perfect. And it has. I don’t see that small area of dry air being an issue.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
You know what storm this reminds me of? Hurricane Ivan 2004.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Sailingtime wrote:Weatherwatcher2018 wrote:At this point do you think warnings can be lifted in Barbados. It seems to be even further south and no great impact to us
Barbados will feel affects of Beryl even if it moves further South than was forecast. A wobble Northward can make a lot of difference. This is why the watches and warnings remain in effect until the storm passes your longitude.
I was thinking we would be spared
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
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The posts or stuff said are NOT an official forecast. Please look to the NHC and NWS for official forecasts and products.
Floyd-1999, Frances-2004, Jeanne-2004, Fay-2008, Beryl-2012, Debby-2012, Colin-2016, Hermine-2016, Julia-2016, Matthew-2016, Irma-2017, Elsa-2021, Idalia-2023, Debby-2024, Helene-2024.
Go Gators! Go Jags!
Floyd-1999, Frances-2004, Jeanne-2004, Fay-2008, Beryl-2012, Debby-2012, Colin-2016, Hermine-2016, Julia-2016, Matthew-2016, Irma-2017, Elsa-2021, Idalia-2023, Debby-2024, Helene-2024.
Go Gators! Go Jags!
Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Core is drying out.
Look for an outer eyewall later this afternoon or early evening.
IMHO Beryl is near peak intensity.
Very likely no Cat 5.
She will be a lot bigger after the upcoming EWRC gets finished maybe sometime tomorrow.
Look for an outer eyewall later this afternoon or early evening.
IMHO Beryl is near peak intensity.
Very likely no Cat 5.
She will be a lot bigger after the upcoming EWRC gets finished maybe sometime tomorrow.
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- TheAustinMan
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Beef Stew wrote:Question for someone who knows climo very well (I'm sure Larry could chime in here)- prior to Beryl breaking the record today, what was the earliest date of a category 4 hurricane east of the Windward Islands? I was thinking Allen in early August, but I'm not sure.
And to further put Beryl in perspective- what's the date of the (former) earliest category 4 in the MDR to form east of 55W?
I believe that record was held by the 1899 San Ciriaco hurricane, which is listed as reaching Cat 4 just east of Guadeloupe on... August 7.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion
Sciencerocks wrote:You know what storm this reminds me of? Hurricane Ivan 2004.
Ivan was a low tracker.
https://i.postimg.cc/KY7yWmT6/ivan.jpg
Last edited by Javlin on Sun Jun 30, 2024 11:33 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion

Last edited by TheBurn on Sun Jun 30, 2024 11:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: ATL: BERYL - Hurricane - Discussion

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