Cirrus building underway.

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SoupBone wrote:NDG wrote:I would had thought that many people in SE TX would had been happy that the Euro shifted east this morning.
Still a very complex situation here, the latest GFS went back to its idea of the low level vorticity not going underneath the mid level circulation. Today we should get a better idea of what model has been right so far. The Euro keeps persistent that an h85 vorticity will be noticeable by this evening SW of Cedar Key while the GFS keeps showing to be a bit further north and elongated.
I definitely am, but as you know me you also know that I have a lot of friends and family still in Louisiana. I'm also intrested to see if these models continue to do the windshield wipers flip flop and go back-and-forth so that the next run will shift back into South East Texas.
Aric Dunn wrote:Looking at radar out of Tallahassee. The velocities and storm motion with surface obs pointing a circ/vort possibly developing.. of course broad right now... south of Tallahassee right on the coast.
NDG wrote:Aric Dunn wrote:Looking at radar out of Tallahassee. The velocities and storm motion with surface obs pointing a circ/vort possibly developing.. of course broad right now... south of Tallahassee right on the coast.
I agree.
Steve wrote:SoupBone wrote:NDG wrote:I would had thought that many people in SE TX would had been happy that the Euro shifted east this morning.
Still a very complex situation here, the latest GFS went back to its idea of the low level vorticity not going underneath the mid level circulation. Today we should get a better idea of what model has been right so far. The Euro keeps persistent that an h85 vorticity will be noticeable by this evening SW of Cedar Key while the GFS keeps showing to be a bit further north and elongated.
I definitely am, but as you know me you also know that I have a lot of friends and family still in Louisiana. I'm also intrested to see if these models continue to do the windshield wipers flip flop and go back-and-forth so that the next run will shift back into South East Texas.
Some of us want to be here.
Went to the store to get some non perishables and stock up on a few cases of water just in case with one straight to the freezer. I’m in wait and see mode, but storms into south central LA (Gustav and Andrew come to mind) usually mean power outages here and downed trees. Assuming no levee issues, we just might have to get through a few days should the EC scenario occur. I’ll be glued and yeah, I woke up like 3:45am to check models. You know it’s hurricane season when...
There is lower confidence in the forecast beyond Saturday as model disagreement becomes greater. The exact track and development, or lack thereof, of the disturbance in the Gulf of Mexico is leading to this greater uncertainty. It is possible that this disturbance influences the weather in our region although any direct impacts are highly unlikely. Once models get a handle on this disturbance, forecast confidence will likely increase.
GCANE wrote:Watching this area refire.
Could be a tower about to pop.
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/img921/8549/dyWUeS.png
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/img922/5237/DfqMBi.png
https://imagizer.imageshack.com/img924/8810/Z8v6hx.png
Aric Dunn wrote:That cluster nw of Tampa has a bunch of convergence and is starting to rotate on radar...
SoupBone wrote:Aric Dunn wrote:That cluster nw of Tampa has a bunch of convergence and is starting to rotate on radar...
Is that development location more favorable to the Euro solution?
Aric Dunn wrote:Also always remember how fast something can go from nothing to a hurricane (not saying it will) but Humberto was litterally just like this with no convection almost no vorticity then all of a sudden bam..
https://youtu.be/Ilz5t1WwMZY
Aric Dunn wrote:Also always remember how fast something can go from nothing to a hurricane (not saying it will) but Humberto was litterally just like this with no convection almost no vorticity then all of a sudden bam..
https://youtu.be/Ilz5t1WwMZY
BobHarlem wrote:It looks like the shear might kick up before any landfall. It'll probably be just a semi-decent rain maker. If you are thinking more wind, you'd do better to press high on the ceiling fan remote.
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