Primarily a tropical weather alert blog, usually, but not always, about Melbourne Florida weather. Initially, an easy way to tell my friends when to board up their house.

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Today is the day

Alberto has slightly weakened overnight, down to a 65 MPH tropical storm. Satellite presentation has also degraded overnight. The hurricane looks more like an extratropical winter-type storm (comma shapped cloud extending up to about SC in the image below) than a hurricane this morning, with dry air near the center just offshore near the Florida big bend area. It would seem that Alberto will not become a hurricane prior to landfall, which is expected around midday today.



Atmospheric flow patterns are expected to shove Alberto a little to its left (west) today then allow it to continue its northeastward track. This has decreased to likelyhood of tropical storm force winds impacting east central FL. Certainly gusts to tropical storm force can be expected (primarilly in the rainbands) but general winds are expected in the 20-25 MPH range.

Main Space Coast impact remains rain, which is all good for us. Radar estimated rainfall amounts in the western peninsula (where most of the rain has fallen) are in the 2 inch range, with a broad pocket of 3-6 inch rainfall from Sarasota to Tampa. Less rain has fallen on the east coast: radar estimated precipitation is generally less than an inch. The Melbourne Airport observed about 1.5 inches over the last couple of days, which is about an inch more than I collected at the hodo-hut. There is one band of showers and storms moving through (probably in the 7-8 AM timeframe this morning) and others will likely develop later today. As mentioned last night, some of these storms could develop tornados, which is the primary threat to our area.

Otherwise, most else in the tropics is quiet, and (to quote the Hurricane Center) "tropical storm formation is not expected through Wednesday".

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home