Yeah looks like ridge is building to me.... is it plausible that mother nature has decided every state from Tx all the way around the gulf and up the EC needs to get a storm this year. Holy crap

It's way farther north than Irma with a trough approaching so it would be OTS
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Yeah but I've never seen and there has never been that I know of a storm come in from the east. The ne is a different story.
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We don't knot to my knowledge whether or not it has anything to do with GW. I honestly don't believe this season has anything to do with it. Extremes happen, and unless we get a season like this for the next 50 years, I don't thing the "GW = more storms, more dangerous storms" argument stands well. Cherry picking isn't going to go well either by saying this year is a sign of GW's impacts. There have been whacky tracks in the past, as Webber posted above. They just happen in the right conditions.Whoa that's crazy. With global warming I bet tracks will get even wackier with the expansion of subtropical ridging.
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First, Texas, soon to be Florida, and now it looks like the East Coast?Getting closer each run, seems like I've seen this movie before....
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Getting closer each run, seems like I've seen this movie before....
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Incredible just freaking incredible.... this may be a hurricane season for the books no doubt!Yep NWP can't handle tropical cyclones losing latitude in the face of strengthening subtropical highs, probably going to keep trending southwestward w/ time unfortunately... Definitely bares watching in the southeastern US.
Totally agree and there are multiple strong CV storms in the past as proof. Lack of sampling of the atmosphere over the ocean especially ridge dynamics through the vertical. And, I believe, lack of understanding of the interaction between large strong storms and the ridge itself.Yep NWP can't handle tropical cyclones losing latitude in the face of strengthening subtropical highs, probably going to keep trending southwestward w/ time unfortunately... Definitely bares watching in the southeastern US.
and brave the storm to come, for it surely looks like rain ...Totally agree and there are multiple strong CV storms in the past as proof. Lack of sampling of the atmosphere over the ocean especially ridge dynamics through the vertical. And, I believe, lack of understanding of the interaction between large strong storms and the ridge itself.
Jose is in a different environment as opposed to Irma currently with a TUTT directly to it's NW in front of the main ridging instead of when Irma was in this position the TUTT was to the NE ahead of the main ridge. It will be interesting if this TUTT lifts out or moves NNW and as the ridging fill's in that space, to see how strong and how far west the main ridge will build. Imo that's what will decide Jose's fate and any conus affects. It really irks me that forecasters refuse to acknowledge model weaknesses/biases time and again and input their own skills into forecasts. Unless we are solidly in a generation of silicon reliant met's who just don't have the skills to forecast on their own anymore.
Just my :weenie: opinion
LOL ... on the front end ... As if it hasn't been already; and we still have Sunday and Monday to go through ...