It's 2020. We need to be as extreme and alarmist-sounding as we can.I’ve never heard of a hurricane outbreak. Have we had one before? Just curious if that wording has been used before.
It's 2020. We need to be as extreme and alarmist-sounding as we can.I’ve never heard of a hurricane outbreak. Have we had one before? Just curious if that wording has been used before.
So true, waiting on the local weather guys to talk about the sunny skies outbreak this weekend.It's 2020. We need to be as extreme and alarmist-sounding as we can.
I don't disagree that the environment will probably support tropical cyclone development. I hope we don't have to hear about any more covid canes or megasuperduper hurricane cluster bombs or the like.So true, waiting on the local weather guys to talk about the sunny skies outbreak this weekend.
Covidcane was the worst. Words cannot Express.I don't disagree that the environment will probably support tropical cyclone development. I hope we don't have to hear about any more covid canes or megasuperduper hurricane cluster bombs or the like.
Yeah because this is totally unbridled alarmism when the Atlantic has produced a record number of tropical cyclones and top 10 ACE thru early August. Did you even bother to read NOAA’s or CSU’s latest hurricane outlooks?It's 2020. We need to be as extreme and alarmist-sounding as we can.
Congratulations!Yahoo News also just published an article on the ongoing Atlantic Hurricane Season, and yours truly (me) is in it .
https://www.yahoo.com/news/weather-experts-issue-most-threatening-024100977.html
I have no problem at all with data presentation or acknowledging the pace we're on. It's amazing to watch, actually. I'm merely talking about the language that is being used to describe things. A hurricane outbreak is most definitely a 2020 way of describing things.Yeah because this is totally unbridled alarmism when the Atlantic has produced a record number of tropical cyclones and top 10 ACE thru early August. Did you even bother to read NOAA’s or CSU’s latest hurricane outlooks?
Congrats! That's awesome.Yahoo News also just published an article on the ongoing Atlantic Hurricane Season, and yours truly (me) is in it .
https://www.yahoo.com/news/weather-experts-issue-most-threatening-024100977.html
I have no problem at all with data presentation or acknowledging the pace we're on. It's amazing to watch, actually. I'm merely talking about the language that is being used to describe things. A hurricane outbreak is most definitely a 2020 way of describing things.
Yahoo News also just published an article on the ongoing Atlantic Hurricane Season, and yours truly (me) is in it .
https://www.yahoo.com/news/weather-experts-issue-most-threatening-024100977.html
Just to put things into perspective, CSU has been issuing hurricane season forecasts for a very long time (since the 1980s and Bill Gray started a lot of this work back in the early 1980s), this year is the most aggressive one they've produced to date, 2005 being the previous record holder. It's pretty insane.
Could this be a situation where everything looks perfect for a blockbuster, apocalyptic pattern for hurricanes, then something goes wrong and it doesn’t happen? Like our blockbuster winter patterns that show up on models, but never materialize?
12z ICON still hanging with it....Today's 12z ECMWF remains pretty stedfast in developing this wave that'll come off the coast of Africa in a few days. It has a sacrificial wave immediately out ahead of it that should moisten its nearby environment and the suppressed Kelvin Wave over the basin should be leaving the Atlantic in a few days. There is certainly a window of opportunity to see another tropical cyclone here.
View attachment 46145
In all likelihood however, unless this becomes a powerful hurricane east of the Antilles, it'll have to plow through a massive wall of shear associated w/ a large basin-scale TUTT if it tries to lift north of the Greater Antilles and Puerto Rico and make a run for the SE US. You can thank the increased irrotational outflow from the upcoming surge in Eastern Pacific tropical cyclone activity for that. Regardless of what happens w/ this particular system, it's only a matter of time before the Atlantic goes hog wild.
View attachment 46146
Yahoo News also just published an article on the ongoing Atlantic Hurricane Season, and yours truly (me) is in it .
https://www.yahoo.com/news/weather-experts-issue-most-threatening-024100977.html
I have to admit, the ICON didn’t do too shabby with Isaias’s genesis and it agrees with the European ensemble. May be a brief window of opportunity in the eastern Atlantic as the suppressed kelvin wave gets out of the way.
Practice...lolAnother appetizer
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Covidcane was the worst. Words cannot Express.
18z GFS hanging with both ICON and Euro....nothing to write home about but dejavu....I have to admit, the ICON didn’t do too shabby with Isaias’s genesis and it agrees with the European ensemble. May be a brief window of opportunity in the eastern Atlantic as the suppressed kelvin wave gets out of the way.
Yeah someone should have been fired over that nonsense
That's GrapefruitLooks like we got a new lemon in the Atlantic again. The development chances are very low right now though.
View attachment 46175
1. A tropical wave is located several hundred miles west-southwest of
the Cabo Verde Islands. Slow development of this system is
possible during the next couple of days as it moves slowly westward.
After that time, environmental conditions are expected to become
less conducive for development.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...10 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...10 percent.
Looks like we got a new lemon in the Atlantic again. The development chances are very low right now though.
View attachment 46175
1. A tropical wave is located several hundred miles west-southwest of
the Cabo Verde Islands. Slow development of this system is
possible during the next couple of days as it moves slowly westward.
After that time, environmental conditions are expected to become
less conducive for development.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...10 percent.
* Formation chance through 5 days...low...10 percent.