2# The shear appears to be north of the system.
In here is something that might impress you
http://www.osei.noaa.gov/Events/Tropica ... 99_N5A.gif
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elysium wrote:Right now it appears to be heading more westward. It has to clear those islands if it is to have a fair shot at vigorous development. Center near vicinity of St. Croix. Can anyone determine if it's heading west or W.N.W.? Looks a little west to me.

HURRICANELONNY wrote:The models are useless till the center is located. The low is too broad from 10n to 17n. We need a little wrap around with the convection and the ULL has to get out of the way. This time of year it could explode as soon as the wave gets the right enviroment. Could be today...???

HURRICANELONNY wrote:The models are useless till the center is located. The low is too broad from 10n to 17n. We need a little wrap around with the convection and the ULL has to get out of the way. This time of year it could explode as soon as the wave gets the right enviroment. Could be today...???


TreasureIslandFLGal wrote:-it won't be too big a deal for Floridians as long as it doesn't head right along into the gulf through the straits! If it heads that way, unempeded directly by land, we could see a huge surge in intensity. The waters are very warm. Look how fast some of the other systems developed this year and last with that kind of heat to work with!
The thing that I am trying to watch is the relationship of that front that is stalled *for now*. Is that thing going to decide to prog east right as a possible Harvey is traveling up into the GOM? -that's the thing us west-coast Floridians watch for.


TreasureIslandFLGal wrote:I know it is rare at this time of year, which is why I am concerned. The TWC and local mets keep reiterating how "rare" this front is, due to its strength and how far south it has already gone. It brought nice temps to a good portion of the country - some needed relief. But seeing that sort of a front at this time of year is making me nervous. Is this going to be the beginning of a pattern of dipping fronts and a strong ridge that could be our direction dictators through August and September? That would be a nightmare for all of florida. -slight shifts east or west would put the panhandle through the east coast under the guns!
Hopefully that isn't at all the case though and it is certainly way too early to guess what the patterns will set up like months from now.
-but the current setup still gives me pause fr what may transpire next week. Even if the front doesn't come way down into the gulf, the ridge having pulled slightly more northerly and forecast to build back again to the west in a few days, seems to be setting up a periphery that could be problemsome for us anyway, regardless of the front.


TreasureIslandFLGal wrote:You folks in Pensacola are way more, and deservedly, skittish! All these storms have gotten you simply because of the ridge shape. -now its pulled a little more east and north, which is why west coasters are watching now.
The best bet for you guys is actually to have the fronts, since they usually seem to time better to put storms up into the big bend rather than right on top of you *again!*.
I agree we all have to share the burden and cathc one now and then, and we in tampa bay have been incredibly lucky. (80 yrs since a biggy!) You guys have more than taken a few hits on the chin. Hopefully the season is over for you folks.

HUC wrote:Hi,cycloneye,be in alert...I think that the center of the system is somewhere between Antigua,and St Christopher.
In Guadeloupe,we have winds from the SSEst at the Raizet airport at 17mph,and here in Basse-Terre(souet tipe of the island) the winds had also changing since 9am,and are blowing now from the SSOuest(190 to 200°) at 10 to 15mph.
Certainly the weather is coming in your direction...
Tomorrow it'll be getting shredded by Hispanola.wxmann_91 wrote:This won't explode until at least tomorrow, if it does at all (and it probably won't).

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