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wxman57 wrote:'CaneFreak wrote:What makes you so sure this is a recurve? I really don't see a large sweeping trough to pick this thing up. All I see is a very weak shortwave trough that *may* allow for the cyclone to sit and stall for a while before before bending back west as the ridge builds back in. Thanks![]()
Projected steering currents across the Caribbean and Gulf next week would suggest it either recurves or begins moving south of west and hits Nicaragua. Massive ridge over the south-central U.S. extending across the Gulf to the NW Caribbean and across the SE U.S. for all of next week.
Aric Dunn wrote:Although this is not a comparison at all to 91L. we have to remember that SW motions do happen when ridges build back in....![]()
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wxman57 wrote:'CaneFreak wrote:What makes you so sure this is a recurve? I really don't see a large sweeping trough to pick this thing up. All I see is a very weak shortwave trough that *may* allow for the cyclone to sit and stall for a while before before bending back west as the ridge builds back in. Thanks![]()
Projected steering currents across the Caribbean and Gulf next week would suggest it either recurves or begins moving south of west and hits Nicaragua. Massive ridge over the south-central U.S. extending across the Gulf to the NW Caribbean and across the SE U.S. for all of next week.
Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
[/quote]wxman57 wrote:'CaneFreak wrote:What makes you so sure this is a recurve? I really don't see a large sweeping trough to pick this thing up. All I see is a very weak shortwave trough that *may* allow for the cyclone to sit and stall for a while before before bending back west as the ridge builds back in. Thanks![]()
Projected steering currents across the Caribbean and Gulf next week would suggest it either recurves or begins moving south of west and hits Nicaragua. Massive ridge over the south-central U.S. extending across the Gulf to the NW Caribbean and across the SE U.S. for all of next week.
Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
fox13weather wrote:Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
Be careful???? Recurve is the favored solution by far??? You are telling people to be careful discussing the situation and then make a comment that is not supported by science. How can you make such a statement when the GFDL and the HWRF have shifted significantly to the west??
fox13weather wrote:Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
Be careful???? Recurve is the favored solution by far??? You are telling people to be careful discussing the situation and then make a comment that is not supported by science. How can you make such a statement when the GFDL and the HWRF have shifted significantly to the west??
Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
Edit: CaneFreak have you BEEN here for the past few years??![]()
Storms come and go that challenge what "Should" happen at any point in a season. Ike being a strong example but inverse. Remember, Climatology is NOT a forecast.
'CaneFreak wrote:I don't care how UNFAVORED of a track it is...the possibility is still very real that this gets trapped and heads back west...just sit back, relax, and watch it unfold...
Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
Edit: CaneFreak have you BEEN here for the past few years??![]()
Storms come and go that challenge what "Should" happen at any point in a season. Ike being a strong example but inverse. Remember, Climatology is NOT a forecast.
HurricaneWarning92 wrote:I believe hes just making an opinion to why he doesnt feel confident. Besides, if its for sure going to recurve then that must mean it gets stronger sooner than expected. or else it just goes towards the yucatan as a weak system, so at the end it didnt recurve either.
Weatherfreak000 wrote:'CaneFreak wrote:I don't care how UNFAVORED of a track it is...the possibility is still very real that this gets trapped and heads back west...just sit back, relax, and watch it unfold...
Weatherfreak000 wrote:^^^
Guys please be careful discussing this solution. You don't want to mislead people when this solution is clearly not favored. Recurve is the favored solution by far.
Edit: CaneFreak have you BEEN here for the past few years??![]()
Storms come and go that challenge what "Should" happen at any point in a season. Ike being a strong example but inverse. Remember, Climatology is NOT a forecast.
That's FINE bro don't forget this whole thing got started cuz you CHALLENGE people, you insulted Gatorcane flat out, then you challenged me. It's like bro....your going to SERIOUSLY challenge people cuz u have a hunch? That's flat out unbecoming.
SO what i'm going to do, and plan on doing, is constantly harping on the recurve solution as I see fit.
Evil Jeremy wrote:HurricaneWarning92 wrote:I believe hes just making an opinion to why he doesnt feel confident. Besides, if its for sure going to recurve then that must mean it gets stronger sooner than expected. or else it just goes towards the yucatan as a weak system, so at the end it didnt recurve either.
There are always more than two options. It's never "this or that". These are the tropics. Anything can happen.
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