• Hello, please take a minute to check out our awesome content, contributed by the wonderful members of our community. We hope you'll add your own thoughts and opinions by making a free account!

Tropical Hurricane Beryl

ForsythSnow

Moderator
Joined
Jan 5, 2017
Messages
9,659
Reaction score
17,468
Location
North Forsyth County, Georgia
Whatever happened to the other ones, we are now at 95. Looks organized on satellite and at 30/30. Some models develop this into a a tropical storm at least so we may get our B name.
 
This already looks like a TD or minimal TS to me per visible loops.
 
Shower activity has changed little in organization near a small
area of low pressure and tropical wave located several hundred miles
west-southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands. In addition, recent
satellite-derived wind data and visible satellite images suggest
that the system may not have a closed surface wind circulation.
Some development of this system is possible during the next day or
two while it moves westward at 10 to 15 mph over the tropical
Atlantic Ocean. Upper-level winds are expected to become less
conducive for development by this weekend when the system approaches
the Lesser Antilles.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...30 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...30 percent.
 
May well be wrong, and if so, not the 1st or last time, but the 2 orange areas are facing some unfriendly skies down the road; what's perked interest, although a month early, is west Africa ... we'll see ...

hiatlsat_None_anim-9 (dragged).jpg

Loop is too big to post, but it's got a real nice swirl coming west ...
 
Shower activity associated with a small area of low pressure and a
tropical wave located about 1000 miles west-southwest of the
Cabo Verde Islands continues to become better organized. A tropical
depression is likely to form during the next day or two
while the
system moves westward to west-northwestward at 15 to 20 mph over the
tropical Atlantic Ocean. By the weekend, however, upper-level winds
are expected to become less conducive for development when the
system approaches the Lesser Antilles.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...high...70 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...high...70 percent.
 
2 areas off the SE coast and both have 60% chance of development over the next 5 days
 
Dadgumit ... :eek:

Beautiful little thing on radar ...

View attachment 5419

I think we have Beryl ...

Good lesson ... do not rely on me to call storms ... o_O

Yep, just named with 40 mph winds conservatively. I think they're higher. It actually could become a hurricane before it weakens. What a surprise!
 
Will this be still another Beryl that isn't retired? Beryl goes back to 1982 and this is the 7th one.
 
Back
Top