TD 9 Soon To Be Irene Probably Out To Sea
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tropicstorm
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TD 9 Soon To Be Irene Probably Out To Sea
There are 2 prominent high pressure systems in the Atlantic right now - our well known Bermuda High and another larger system in the eastern Atlantic, with Harvey wedged between them creating the trough / weakness. Like all tropical systems, won't TD 9 / Irene be inclined to ride the western ridge periphery of the more eastern high pressure system that it will first encounter and get swooped up by the leftover Harvey trough, thereby almost certainly sending Irene on the nw/n recurvature? Even if the Harvey trough / weakness diminishes, won't Irene still ride the periphery of the first prominent high pressure ridge? Either way, looks to me like this one is probably going out to sea.
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- deltadog03
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- Typhoon_Willie
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- WindRunner
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- deltadog03
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- senorpepr
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Looking here you can see the subtropical ridge is really the only dominate anticyclonic feature in the Atlantic and is currently located northeast of the Azores with ridging extending southwestward toward the north-central Atlantic and eastward toward the Brest Peninsula of France.
The subtropical ridge is often referred to by Americans as the Bermuda High, but also referred to as the Azores High by Europeans. Regardless, it's the subtropical ridge.
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- deltadog03
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- timeflow
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Gloria was in late September of 1985. If that's the Gloria you're thinking of. I was 13 years old, lived in Bedford Hills, NY. That day was interesting. I put on a big orange poncho and did my paper-route in the middle of the storm (which for our area had winds in the 20-40mph range). I remember these two teenage girls on the phone talking to each other in opposing condos watched me pass between in the wind with my poncho flapping. They burst out laughing. After the storm swept inland it became more blustery and cool. The sun peeked out. If I recall correctly the trees were by then changing color somewhat, and above the wind driven yellow trees there were fast moving clouds and a spectacular rainbow. For me it was fun... but out on Long Island I think they had a pretty bad aweful day.
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Jim Cantore
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