Latest Update from NCEP of anomalys in Atlantic and Pacific

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cycloneye
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Latest Update from NCEP of anomalys in Atlantic and Pacific

#1 Postby cycloneye » Thu Mar 31, 2005 7:48 am

Image

The grafics dont show nothing that looks like el nino trying to appear.In the Atlantic side the Tropical Atlantic stays warm however the Gulfstream waters just off the East Coast of the US doesn't warm bigtime.Let's see down the road if this forecast verifies or not.
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canegrl04
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#2 Postby canegrl04 » Thu Mar 31, 2005 8:41 am

The waters off the US coast look cooler than normal.Even the GOM.Whats up with that? :?:
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#3 Postby Scorpion » Thu Mar 31, 2005 4:55 pm

They will warm very soon. It has been a cooler than average winter.
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#4 Postby Guest » Thu Mar 31, 2005 5:13 pm

The SST images change with each updated forecast. The cool anomolies off the East Coast are just that anomolies. They are still within the range for tropical cyclogenesis.
The temp of 80 degrees is a standard, but, we have seen slow development in waters of 78 degrees. Just think, even if the waters ar at 78, and a hurricane came into the area, it would sustain till landfall.
Watch, the waters will be plenty warn enough along the east coast of Florida as well as the eastern GOM by the time July gets here.
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#5 Postby x-y-no » Thu Mar 31, 2005 5:57 pm

Ouch ...

If those July - September temps in the Carribean verify, that's trouble.

I've been anticipating an active season in the Carribean and Gulf, and this would support that.
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