There has been a cool phenomenon along the southeast Florida coast over the last several days. Thanks to a persistent Bermuda high, an ESE steering flow across the Bahamas has caused a daily plume of showers from Grand Bahama all the way to the southeast coast of Florida. I might as well call this the GBP (Grand Bahama Plume), what the hey. Grand Bahama island is oriented E-W and convection from day time heating feeds a string of showers and t-showers that can extend all the way to the Florida coast. Depending on the steering flow wind direction, this plume affects different parts of the southeast Florida coast. A steering flow direction of 120 degrees caused the plume to reach as far north as Melbourne on Saturday, then it shifted farther south across Palm Beach county on Sunday as the wind direction shifted to 100-090 degrees. With little to no shear and the right amount of moisture, this plume has been almost solid at times from the western tip of Grand Bahama, all the way to the FL coast. Almost like lake effect snow, the sun shines either side of the plume, but in it, showers are persistent and heavy at times. The drier the feed of air across Grand Bahama, the more the GBP is broken and sometimes dies out before reachimg the FL coast.
Smerby
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