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'CaneFreak wrote:Agreed. An upper level ANTI-cyclone is forming over the western GOM now and I would think that if this ends up missing the trough and heads west, it will have a whole lot better environment to work with and we could get a decent system out of this current mess. Do you think this misses the trough?
Nikki wrote:"An upper level ANTI-cyclone is forming over the western GOM now"could someone please explain what this will do for 92L?? Thank you....please be gentle I am a novice at this stuff...
Hurricane_Luis wrote:Nikki wrote:"An upper level ANTI-cyclone is forming over the western GOM now"could someone please explain what this will do for 92L?? Thank you....please be gentle I am a novice at this stuff...
I think an anticyclone will protect 92L from shear...As we saw yesterday when it was organising fast an anticyclone was right over 92L (Pro mets correct me if I'm wrong)
CYCLONE MIKE wrote:Nice detailed posts there ozonepete. Now what if this stays status quo and never develops, which is what I am thinking. Will moisture still get streamed up to us in se la or just get shoved into MX in a couple days.
ozonepete wrote:Btw, I threw in some basics for you, Nikki, because you asked.![]()
And I should have added that of course any point in between northern Mexico and the LA/MS (even the FL panhandle) is possible depending on what the anti-cclone and trough do over the next few days. This is tough stuff. It's when even the models get confused.
hurricanekid416 wrote:What are the chances it becomes a tropical storm
rockyman wrote:There does appear to be a low-level spin forming on the northern coast of the Yucatan. Let's see if it persists.
chrisnnavarre wrote:rockyman wrote:There does appear to be a low-level spin forming on the northern coast of the Yucatan. Let's see if it persists.
Yep, see that too....21.5N 88W something looks like it may be spinning up...lets see if it continues north and keeps spinning.
Ntxw wrote:As wxman57 mentioned this morning two options are still fairly clear. If it heads north it's going to get ripped apart by roaring shear (deep trough over the eastern conus with 50+kts of shear) as it gets near the northern gulf. Staying in the BOC is the best chance of survival and maybe some development (questionable though) before hitting land likely MX.
wxman57 wrote:I think 50% is quite generous. Thinking 20-30% at most. Just way too much shear now. Upper low to NW, upper high to SE. Not in a good position to develop. If it tracks north it runs into 50-60kt SW winds off the LA coast in 24-36 hrs. I think part of the moisture goes north, part west. Have to watch the part that goes west more, as it may be the only chance of development.
...having to hold Bones back from the mic now.
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