WV loop - this will be interestng
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WV loop - this will be interestng
It looks to me like the ridge is building Westward into the GOM, but
the ULL in the central GOL is sliding East. This will be interesting to watch in the next 12-24 hours.
IMHO, South Florida is looking more and more likely for landfall.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
the ULL in the central GOL is sliding East. This will be interesting to watch in the next 12-24 hours.
IMHO, South Florida is looking more and more likely for landfall.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
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PurdueWx80
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Right now. unless something changes Jeanne's course, I'd say right at our just South of West Palm Beach.
The bad news for you, if the ceonvection stays as nasty on the South side, as is showing on IR images right now, you will see some strong weather in your neck of the woods too. The good news? You should be South of landfall.
Again, that's my opinion. One good wobble left or right and that could change a lot.
The bad news for you, if the ceonvection stays as nasty on the South side, as is showing on IR images right now, you will see some strong weather in your neck of the woods too. The good news? You should be South of landfall.
Again, that's my opinion. One good wobble left or right and that could change a lot.
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PurdueWx80 wrote:I noticed this too...the clouds around the upper low actually bulged back to the WEST during and after the eclipse. That is a tell-tale sign of a strong ridge building/moving west.
You got it - and if that continues, she'll probably be in the GOM for some period of time. That is going to cause a tremendous amount of anxiety
if that verifies.
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- cape_escape
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dhweather wrote:PurdueWx80 wrote:I noticed this too...the clouds around the upper low actually bulged back to the WEST during and after the eclipse. That is a tell-tale sign of a strong ridge building/moving west.
You got it - and if that continues, she'll probably be in the GOM for some period of time. That is going to cause a tremendous amount of anxiety
if that verifies.
GULP....in the GOM!!!
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Foladar
dhweather wrote:Right now. unless something changes Jeanne's course, I'd say right at our just South of West Palm Beach.
The bad news for you, if the ceonvection stays as nasty on the South side, as is showing on IR images right now, you will see some strong weather in your neck of the woods too. The good news? You should be South of landfall.
Again, that's my opinion. One good wobble left or right and that could change a lot.
What kind of winds? I hate to sound greedy or stupid, but I just want some winds :| .. 60 mph is good!
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Foladar wrote:dhweather wrote:Right now. unless something changes Jeanne's course, I'd say right at our just South of West Palm Beach.
The bad news for you, if the ceonvection stays as nasty on the South side, as is showing on IR images right now, you will see some strong weather in your neck of the woods too. The good news? You should be South of landfall.
Again, that's my opinion. One good wobble left or right and that could change a lot.
What kind of winds? I hate to sound greedy or stupid, but I just want some winds :| .. 60 mph is good!
I know, some wins is fun.
You'll probably have TS winds, maybe cat1. OF course, if she makes cat4
you might get closer to cat 2 winds.
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- Ground_Zero_92
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Kevin_Cho wrote:dhweather wrote:PurdueWx80 wrote:I noticed this too...the clouds around the upper low actually bulged back to the WEST during and after the eclipse. That is a tell-tale sign of a strong ridge building/moving west.
You got it - and if that continues, she'll probably be in the GOM for some period of time. That is going to cause a tremendous amount of anxiety
if that verifies.
Can you explain what the ridge will do to the storm's path?
If the ridge is building west, do not expect much, if any northern component. Jeanne would stay more due west with some wsw possible depending on the strength of the ridge.
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Kevin_Cho wrote:dhweather wrote:PurdueWx80 wrote:I noticed this too...the clouds around the upper low actually bulged back to the WEST during and after the eclipse. That is a tell-tale sign of a strong ridge building/moving west.
You got it - and if that continues, she'll probably be in the GOM for some period of time. That is going to cause a tremendous amount of anxiety
if that verifies.
Can you explain what the ridge will do to the storm's path?
Essentially, the ridge helps dictate the path of the cyclone.
In this case, the ridge appears to be building Westward, to somewhere
around 87W. What that means is, if that holds, there is nothing to reallly
cause a Northward trend as she approaches S FLorida. This could lead to
her getting into the GOM.
If the ridge weakens/erodes on its west side, that's where the Northerly component kicks in.
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That all depends on the recurve - if she gets into the GOM then starts the curve, Tampa might
see more than they are expecting.
It will be very important to watch this storm today.
I'll say this from experience - I boarded up and
left for Ivan. My anenometer got one gust to 50, that was it (80 miles West of landfall). Under the same circumstances, I'd do it again. Nothing here worth my or my families life. My point, no harm in preparing. It's time consuming and frustrating, but worth it.
see more than they are expecting.
It will be very important to watch this storm today.
I'll say this from experience - I boarded up and
left for Ivan. My anenometer got one gust to 50, that was it (80 miles West of landfall). Under the same circumstances, I'd do it again. Nothing here worth my or my families life. My point, no harm in preparing. It's time consuming and frustrating, but worth it.
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