Portastorm wrote:Steve wrote:I could be wrong, but I don't think this will develop outside of being a prolific rainmaker. Looks like there are some bands setting up offshore today, and certainly the MS Gulf Coast looks to get a lot of that in the next day or so. It's definitely juiced up, but I don't think there will be enough time with the overall flow to get anything notable at the surface beyond maybe broad low pressure (as there is definitely some turning and churning down there).
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/sat/sat ... roduct=vis
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/sat/sat ... =truecolor
Steve, send it west please. We Texans will have the welcome wagon out for any rain. For all intents and purposes, after Harvey, someone turned off the spigot over our state.
I was down in San Marcos during that insane heatwave in mid-July where it was like 107 and dusty. That was hot as ****. Not sure how far west any of the streaming in tropical moisture will get, but it will at least get to SE/East Texas. Looks like the GFS wants to put a low down in the Bay of Campeche near the end of its run. Not sure if it's sensing an EPAC crossover or the end-game for the Gulf season (at least until Fall) with a system riding up the TX coast before possibly turning Northeast. IDK. 7 Day QPF doesn't have much for the Hill Country though I'm assuming it's underdoing rainfall along the coast. You'd have to think there will be 3-5" in the next few days in the Triangle and maybe as far inland as Houston.