A little upwelling from Arlene - SST loop

This is the general tropical discussion area. Anyone can take their shot at predicting a storms path.

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Forum rules

The posts in this forum are NOT official forecasts and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K. For official information, please refer to products from the National Hurricane Center and National Weather Service.

Help Support Storm2K
Message
Author
User avatar
dhweather
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6199
Joined: Sat Aug 14, 2004 9:29 pm
Location: Heath, TX
Contact:

A little upwelling from Arlene - SST loop

#1 Postby dhweather » Sun Jun 12, 2005 8:32 pm

The extreme NE GOM cooled off just a little from Arlene, watch this loop:

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
0 likes   

Matt-hurricanewatcher

#2 Postby Matt-hurricanewatcher » Sun Jun 12, 2005 8:35 pm

Thanks dweather I agree. Arlene had a very powerful LLC. In which took alot of heat to hold the system together. Just think for a second if it did not have that dry air or shear.
0 likes   

User avatar
dhweather
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6199
Joined: Sat Aug 14, 2004 9:29 pm
Location: Heath, TX
Contact:

#3 Postby dhweather » Sun Jun 12, 2005 8:38 pm

Arlene did rather well for herself, given the circumstances. That much dry air will do many systems in.
0 likes   

User avatar
Swimdude
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 2270
Joined: Mon Jul 26, 2004 11:57 am
Location: Houston, TX

#4 Postby Swimdude » Sun Jun 12, 2005 8:47 pm

This is the only place that I know of where we can speak of storms as if they're actual people, and not get weird looks. It's satisfying.
0 likes   

Anonymous

#5 Postby Anonymous » Sun Jun 12, 2005 9:17 pm

Swimdude wrote:This is the only place that I know of where we can speak of storms as if they're actual people, and not get weird looks. It's satisfying.


She wasnt a person?? :eek:
0 likes   

User avatar
Steve
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9628
Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 11:41 pm
Location: Gulf of Gavin Newsom

#6 Postby Steve » Sun Jun 12, 2005 10:02 pm

dh,

what's super interesting (or should be for you) is that the hottest water in the Gulf is south of the LA and MS coasts right now. Vermillion Bay is the hottest outside of the Bay of Campeche.

http://fermi.jhuapl.edu/avhrr/gm/05jun/ ... 2_2359.png

I didn't do a season forecast this year, but I think (as I have the last 3 years) that Mississippi is in the crosshairs. If anything hits us in LA, you already know you've got a nice slice of the pie. Also Galveston Bay is cooking for you Texans. Nature (conservation of mass, conservation of energy) had a tendency to want to resolve itself. We shall see.

Steve
0 likes   

User avatar
HURAKAN
Professional-Met
Professional-Met
Posts: 46086
Age: 38
Joined: Thu May 20, 2004 4:34 pm
Location: Key West, FL
Contact:

#7 Postby HURAKAN » Sun Jun 12, 2005 10:08 pm

That's interesting but normal, it should get back to normal over the next few days.
0 likes   

User avatar
dhweather
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6199
Joined: Sat Aug 14, 2004 9:29 pm
Location: Heath, TX
Contact:

#8 Postby dhweather » Sun Jun 12, 2005 10:13 pm

Steve wrote:dh,

what's super interesting (or should be for you) is that the hottest water in the Gulf is south of the LA and MS coasts right now. Vermillion Bay is the hottest outside of the Bay of Campeche.

http://fermi.jhuapl.edu/avhrr/gm/05jun/ ... 2_2359.png

I didn't do a season forecast this year, but I think (as I have the last 3 years) that Mississippi is in the crosshairs. If anything hits us in LA, you already know you've got a nice slice of the pie. Also Galveston Bay is cooking for you Texans. Nature (conservation of mass, conservation of energy) had a tendency to want to resolve itself. We shall see.

Steve


Boy, that's the truth. From around the mouth of the MS river to Vermillion is all cookin. And yes, and SE LA landfall will be hard on us particularly. Isidore, just a large TS, pushed water all up into Hancock county, as landfall was made near Grand Isle.

If this turns out to be a GOM season, there's a lot of potential for major canes.
0 likes   

User avatar
BayouVenteux
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 775
Age: 64
Joined: Thu Sep 04, 2003 3:26 pm
Location: Ascension Parish, Louisiana (30.3 N 91.0 W)

#9 Postby BayouVenteux » Sun Jun 12, 2005 10:18 pm

Steve wrote:dh,

what's super interesting (or should be for you) is that the hottest water in the Gulf is south of the LA and MS coasts right now. Vermillion Bay is the hottest outside of the Bay of Campeche.


FWIW Steve, some reported water surface temps from that general vicinity this evening:

Salt Point (LSU Coastal Studies Institute Monitoring Station) 83.8° F

Marsh Island (LSU Coastal Studies Institute Monitoring Station) 88.7°

The LUMCON Center's station near Chauvin...88.0° F

Wow, those last two are hard to believe for June 12..can they indeed be correct!?
0 likes   

User avatar
Steve
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9628
Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 11:41 pm
Location: Gulf of Gavin Newsom

#10 Postby Steve » Sun Jun 12, 2005 10:49 pm

I don't know. 88 degrees is Cat 3 stuff to be sure.

>>Boy, that's the truth. From around the mouth of the MS river to Vermillion is all cookin. And yes, and SE LA landfall will be hard on us particularly. Isidore, just a large TS, pushed water all up into Hancock county, as landfall was made near Grand Isle.

Frank P (esteemed member of S2k and CFHC) said that Isidore was one of the highest storm tides/surges since Camile. He lives on Beach Blvd. in Bix so if anyone knows, Frank P knows. (Obligatory shout out to Frank P). Off the record, I think we've got a shot at a Cat 2 or 3 between Terrebonne Parish and Santa Rosa Co. this year.

Steve
0 likes   

Scorpion

#11 Postby Scorpion » Sun Jun 12, 2005 11:34 pm

I find the 88 hard to believe. It was about 84-85 degree SSTs in the Caribbean according to the ship.
0 likes   

User avatar
crazycajuncane
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 1097
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2004 2:51 pm
Location: Lafayette, Louisiana
Contact:

#12 Postby crazycajuncane » Mon Jun 13, 2005 12:42 am

It's been a hot June around here. I think we were hitting upper 90's in May. Plus we were in a good long drought for a while.

A lot of summers we don't get past 95 degrees and we've beat that several times already. It's probably that hot in the Vermillion Bay.

BTW.... that is the same Vermillion Bay that saved us from being hit with a Cat. 4 Hurricane in 2002.
0 likes   

Frank P
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 2779
Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 10:52 am
Location: Biloxi Beach, Ms
Contact:

#13 Postby Frank P » Mon Jun 13, 2005 7:29 am

Steve wrote:

Frank P (esteemed member of S2k and CFHC) said that Isidore was one of the highest storm tides/surges since Camile. He lives on Beach Blvd. in Bix so if anyone knows, Frank P knows. (Obligatory shout out to Frank P). Off the record, I think we've got a shot at a Cat 2 or 3 between Terrebonne Parish and Santa Rosa Co. this year.


Hi Steve, my good cresent city neighbor, yeah I've been tracking storms since Camille and Issy is the only storm since to actually put water at the base of the seawall in front of my house in Biloxi.. and I've stayed in my house for every storm since I bought my house in 1975. Note: Elane and Georges could not do it.... that's about an 8.5 to 9 foot surge to get water to the base of the seawall... thing about Izzy was I got hardly no convection at all with the system... (I know the surge for Georges was much worse more to the east in Gautier and the Pascagoula) Izzy was interesting because I sat in my lawn chair pretty much throughout the entire storm watching the surge put the new MS coast coliseum pier in front of my house, and didn't get wet.... my winds might have been 50K at best and only in gusts... more like 40K... but the surge was incredible for just a TS will little convection (in my area)... lessoned learned for sure. Since Camille, no storm surge has been higher in my area than Izzy...

that pier was about a mile away to the east and it was deposited on the beach in sections from Izzy....
0 likes   

User avatar
Steve
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9628
Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2003 11:41 pm
Location: Gulf of Gavin Newsom

#14 Postby Steve » Mon Jun 13, 2005 10:01 am

That's funny because it's kind of the same thing that happened here for Georges. We got a total of like .25" of rain with him, but the wind and waves destroyed the majority of the remaining camps on Lake Pontchartrain, flooded the Lakefront Airport (like I had never seen before) and demolished Brunnings Seafood Restauraunt. Sometimes being on the east or west side of a storm, even if dry, you can still have some serious impact.

Steve
0 likes   

User avatar
dhweather
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6199
Joined: Sat Aug 14, 2004 9:29 pm
Location: Heath, TX
Contact:

#15 Postby dhweather » Mon Jun 13, 2005 1:18 pm

Wow, it's 90 here now, with a heat index of 106 - won't take long at all
to warm things back up.
0 likes   

User avatar
Lowpressure
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 2032
Age: 58
Joined: Sun Sep 14, 2003 9:17 am
Location: Charlotte, North Carolina

#16 Postby Lowpressure » Mon Jun 13, 2005 7:34 pm

I see Grand Isle and Pensacola at 86.2 and Freeport Tx at 89.2! It is plenty hot out there and a little early.
0 likes   

User avatar
dhweather
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6199
Joined: Sat Aug 14, 2004 9:29 pm
Location: Heath, TX
Contact:

#17 Postby dhweather » Fri Jun 17, 2005 5:08 pm

Well, it looks like the SST's have rebounded nicely after Arlene.


http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT ... -loop.html
0 likes   


Return to “Talkin' Tropics”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 605 guests