Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:Scorpion, I respect your option. But the dry air to the systems north will only likely allow for slow development over the next few days. Maybe Wilma later tomarrow. Fellowed by a strengthing to a strong tropical storm/cat1 hurricane by late Wednesday into Thursday. Once over the Gulf if it doe's get picked up by the trough there will likely be shear...Also Tchp is lower then needed for a major hurricane.
According to Derek Ortt, Don Sutherland, NHC, and many, many other pro mets, it will reach major hurricane status. You use to overplay storms, now you constantly downplay them. Just because there is dry air now doesn't mean the it can't moisten up in the next few days.
Rita, Katrina, and Emily all had slow starts (remember Open Wave Emily?), but once their inner core got going, they bombed. The inner core takes time to organize. I don't see how this will be much different, with the exception of the dry air (which will abate by 24 hours, trust me), the upper-level conditions coupled with the high SST's and HHC is almost perfect for rapid intensification.
I don't see how this will not reach major hurricane status. My thinking is unchanged. Strong category 4 in four days, followed by some weakening in the GOM.
EDIT: Also, with the leftward shift, the projected track takes future Wilma over portions of the Loop Current, and also in warm eddy in the western Caribbean.
