Stormcenter wrote:Now I know Bonnie
supposed to eventually turn north and then NE but after looking at this morning satellite not only is she still moving on a more westerly but at what looks like a quicker speed. I would be concerned if I live from SE La. to the AL. border. IMO
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
One of the many not-so-scientific met things I've learned from both mets and members here at S2K -- weather is never "supposed to" do anything. I think it was Derek (sorry if I'm wrong) who vented last year about how people say "It's supposed to rain today." It might be forecast to rain, but the weather is going to do whatever the darn well heck it pleases. Of course, I'm just as guilty of saying "supposed to" because that's common usage for when we talk with friends and neighbors about what the weather might be like for the day. We're simply used to saying it that way.
And one of the many met things I've learned here is that models can change drastically and so can forecast paths. You can put your finger down on your desk and draw a line that goes up towards the top left corner and then curves around and goes up to the top right corner. You can do it 10 different times and never draw the line in the exact same location, even though it's pretty much the same line. In kind of an amatuer way of understanding it, I think the models are like that. Just look at the archive of Claudette's forecast path
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/archive/2003/CL ... hics.shtml (especially from Frame #13 - July 11, 2003, 4 PM) until landfall. The "path" (the line) was almost similar in almost all of the graphics that followed. However, the actual position of the storm kept changing. She was "supposed to" turn west, but she kept going just a little bit further north and landfall was "supposed to" be at the TX/MX border (even as late as 7/13), but that soon changed as she did what she wanted to do and made landfall on the central TX coast on 7/15).
Two days made a heck of a difference. I won't even begin to tell you how bad it was to watch Lili come so close.
It can be a roller coaster ride to watch these things (excitement, fear, excitement...up, down, up, down). Unfortunately, storms don't stay on track as well as roller coasters.