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.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Hurricane Gustav continues to head toward Louisiana this morning. Landfall as a major hurricane is expected tomorrow around noon. Unlike some recent hurricanes that have weakened prior to landfall along the north gulf coast (Katrina is the most recent example) it appears that won't be the case with Gus. Strengthening is expected today as Gus heads over the warm water of the Gulf of Mexico. Hurricane warnings for all of Louisiana were hoisted this morning, and the city of New Orleans has told everyone to get out now. Local impacts include the wind and outer bands of rain during the day today.

Bigger local story is Hanna. Clearly, Hanna doesn't look like much when viewed from satellite. She's been in a hostile environment for the last few days, and little strengthening is expected over the next three days as she wanders somewhat aimlessly toward the Bahamas. Even more shear--this time from north to south-- is expected over Hanna in the 2-4 day period, but the computer guidance doesn't predict Hanna to weaken very much while moving a little toward the south.

At this point, the modeling becomes a little more interesting. All of the models turn Hanna toward the north or northwest. Many of them have this turn occurring east of the Bahamas, such that Hanna passes off to our east. One model takes Hanna farther south (to Cuba) than all the rest; the resulting track takes the storm over Florida but to our west. The sooner the turn toward the north begins, the less likely Hanna will prove to be a problem for us. It might be a couple more days before we figure that out though.

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Friday, August 29, 2008

Hanna gets interesting

Tropical Storm Hanna will make for an interesting week next week.

Yesterday TD#8 was upgraded to TS Hanna. Hanna then promptly had it's thunderstorms blown well to the east by shear, leaving the center completely exposed. Since then, thunderstorms have reformed over (well, at least closer to) the center. The shear from the upper level low to the west is expected to relax and allow Hanna to organize and strengthen over the next couple of days.

Many of the forecast models (and the official forecast) take Hanna to about 26 N latitude and 70 W longitude, or about 600 miles SE of Melbourne by Sunday morning. Then things get interesting. Some models effectively stall Hanna near this spot, and a few are starting to turn it to the south. While this would be an unusual track, it has happened before. All of this would be in response to an area of high pressure building in from the north; since Hanna can't go over it and can't go through it, it's gotta go around it. We've even got one model that avoids Florida all together and makes a landfall in the north central Gulf of Mexico which, while neat to look at, is a ten-day forecast making it hard to believe for now.

For now, Hanna still needs to be watched, but things are too uncertain to take any action.

Gustav has moved away from Jamaica and is expected to begin a phase of rapid strengthening as it heads toward western Cuba and for now, the west Louisiana / east Texas portion of the Gulf Coast. There are some variables and uncertainities in Gus' track as well; hopefully some of these will be fleshed out tonight with some special data that will be loaded into tonight's set of model runs (also true for Hanna). Some wind shear is forecast which Gus reaches the Gulf of Mexico, so some weakening is expected, but he should still make landfall as a major hurricane.

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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Gus marching in? TD#8 forms

Tropical Storm Gustav has strengthened and moved south this morning. The strengthening (now 70 MPH and 988 mb) was expected as Gus pulled away from land. The jog/relocation south was not expected; the short term track now has Gus passing south of Jamaica instead of to the north. It is expected to turn toward the west today, however if it goes much further south, a Mexican landfall comes back into play. The long term track still points Gus to New Orleans, potentially allowing that city to test their new evacuation plans. I also noticed pump prices at the local WalMart gas station jumped a dime this morning.

Of more immediate concern locally is newly form Tropical Depression 8 which will probably be Tropical Storm Hanna in the next 24-36 hours. Previously I thought this would curve harmlessly out to sea, and it still may do that since, historically, many storms that cross 20 north latitude at 58 west longitude pose little threat to Florida. For now, the models basically point Hanna toward us, so it bears continued watching. Currently there is (and has been for the last few days) an upper-level low to the west of TD#8 disrupting the storm; this low is forecast to weaken and allow TD#8 to strengthen.

A ridge of high pressure is forecast to build in from the north and block the poleward path of TD#8/Hanna (stop me if you've heard that before) in about 3 days. Forecasting the strength, location, and movement of this ridge for now seems to be the critical part of the forecast, and, of course, all the usual caviats regarding model forecasts of newly formed tropical cyclones apply. This morning's 5 day forecast position is still 600 miles to our east, and at that point Hanna is expected to be moving very slowly, so there is no immediate threat. Just keep watching

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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Gus is interesting, but make sure you look east

Gustav will be the big story over the weekend, but please keep your eyes looking east too.

Gus made landfall on the southwestern coast of Haiti yesterday as a hurricane. He has since weakened to a tropical storm with 60 MPH winds due to land interactions. The current forecast has Gus moving along the southern Cuban coast, cross the extreme western tip of Cuba, and then essentially head for the Texas/Louisiana Gulf Coast as a major hurricane. Buy...Gas...Now...

The bigger local threat is from the broad area of low pressure several hundred miles northeast of the northern Leeward islands. This area is expected to develop later this week as the upper-level winds become more favorable in that part of the world. While most of the models recurve this system between 65 and 70 degrees west longitude (i.e., well off our coast) we do have one model that indicates a threat to our area in about 8 days. You don't need to board up now, but you do need to watch it.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Hop on the bus, Gus

We've got ourselves a hurricane. Probably gonna be a bigun too by the time all is said and done.

Gustav ("Gus") was upgraded to a hurricane at this morning's 5 AM advisory. Maximum sustained winds are 85 MPH, and reading the Hurricane Center's thinking this morning one gets the impression it might very well be stronger than that. Central pressure is 984 mb.

Gus is moving toward the northwest at 9 MPH. Over the past day or so Gus was moving northward in response to a low pressure system to its north and a ridge of high pressure its east. This low pressure system has moved on to the east and has been replaced with a strengthening ridge of high pressure that is now located to the north of Gus. Accordingly, we expect Gus to slow its forward speed and turn toward the left (west). The official forecast grazes the southwestern coast Haiti, and then moves south of Cuba hitting the very western end of Cuba in 5 days. All of the model guidance is fairly well south of this forecast track, and the hurricane center acknowledges their track might be too far to the north. Given the natural inclination on their part to slowly modify forecast tracks (something that has served them very well over the years) this was a fairly significant shift on their part. If they moved their tracks as wildly as some of the models do, one day we'd have them warning Boston and the next day Houston. At any rate, look for a track modification to the south with subsequent forecasts.

Beyond 5 days, of course is a crapshoot (that would be why "errors may be large" accompanies every 5 day forecast, and no forecasts are made beyond that). There is, of course the good chance Gus hits the Yucatan. If Gus emerges farther north into the Gulf of Mexico, then it gets interesting. Anywhere from the FL Panhandle to Mexico would be possible locations for landfall. My guess is for the Yucatan, but I'm not always right about these things. Central Florida seems relatively safe for now.

Strength, again, is a little easier. The water is warm, the shear is low, Gus is getting its act together, so I see no reason why we won't have a major cane on our hands in a couple days, provided Gus refuses the temptations of landmasses.

There is another area of interest to the east of Puerto Rico. This area is expected to recurve well east of our area and present no problems for us.

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Sunday, August 24, 2008

Fay gone, next one coming?

The Hurricane Center has finally issued it's last advisory for Fay. The remnants of Fay will continue to drop more rain than most people need over the southern US. The forecasts diverge a fair bit regarding the length that the remnants will hang around the southern US.

There are actually two areas of investigation in the Atlantic. I've been looking for the last couple days at the southern of these two areas, near the coast of Venezuela. The second is near 23N and 52W and honestly appears to be too far north to cause any harm to us and is moving into an area of increased shear, though it still bears watching. The first, southern area continues to be of more concern. The models remain in two camps, one well south of us (not too big a deal) and one just a tiny bit east of us (bigger deal). Either way, we expect this to become stronger over the next few days since the shear is low, and the water is warm. For now, I'm thinking the southern route makes more sense, but I'm not entirely convinced yet.

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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Beautiful morning, and the next one

Blue sky, sun is up, not overly hot or humid (though with the dewpoint at 75 F I must be adapting) and a light breeze. Roads are bone dry (at least here) and the local canals are back to normal height (though the big ones remain swollen). If there was a golf course around that wasn't flooded it would be a great morning to get out and play...

I'd prefer not to talk about Fay anymore, so all I'll mention is that the southeastern most scattered bands of rain are near Ocala. I hear Georgia wants the rain...they can have it.

The "next one" is an area of concern centered near 10 N and 55 W. Now, before you go and get your tarps out, the next one is merely the next one to watch, not necessarily the next one coming here. I mentioned this area yesterday, and then noted the computer model trend was to recurve it out in the Bahamas. Since then, the center has relocated a fair bit to the south and east and those models that picked up on the shift have now modified their track to be more of a Jamaica, Yucatan, and Gulf of Mexico threat. A model or two still do call for recurvature, so this remains one to watch. It will take another day (at least) for the models to reasonably focus on a solution.

There appear to be no obvious reasons for the system to decay: the shear is low and expected to remain so, the water is warm, and the dry air is slowly eroding.

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Friday, August 22, 2008

Drying out and cleaning up

Things are beginning to improve. The roads in this neighborhood are mostly dry now. I'm amazed at how quickly the drainage worked, since there was an awful lot of water that had to be moved here and elsewhere. Other neighborhoods obviously had more flooding problems than we did, and their cleanup will take much longer.

The sun made a brief appearance yesterday afternoon, and I was able to see a small piece of blue sky yesterday. First time since the weekend I think. As Fay slowly pulls off to the north and west at 6 MPH, conditions should improve. We remain under a tropical storm warning, and the rainshield still extends east of Orlando. The good news is that the satellite images indicate the cloud shield extends only about60-80 miles south of here--we might get another patch of blue sky later today, but hopefully more than that to help dry things out.

The center of Fay is near Gainesville this morning, and in three days is expected to be north and a little east of New Orleans. She has not changed strength very much since yesterday.

Looking ahead, there is another area of concern currently located 600 miles east of the islands. The Hurricane Center gives this a medium probability of development over the next 48 hours, so it bears some watching. Only one model (for now) develops this area into anything of concern, and that development passes well off to our east.

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Thursday, August 21, 2008

The tide is high

A few pictures from around the neighborhood. The first is the pond that my street is supposed to drain into. The kids fish from that dock in drier times.


This is the dock at our pavilion near the front of the neighborhood.


And finally this is the pond at the pavilion.

Roads in the neighborhood are generally passable. I was able to carefully drive out and, once I made it out of the neighborhood, the roads were clear without standing water. The grocery store was opening, though some of the small businesses might decide to wait a little while before opening.

Fay has technically made it offshore at Daytona, so the third landfall in Fay's "Triple Lindy" trek should occur sometime today. Since Fay is currently stationary, it'll actually need to move to accomplish this. Movement is expected today, as the high pressure from the northeast builds south. Winds are at 60 MPH and the pressure is at 994 mb; neither of these measures have changed much overnight while Fay was just offshore.

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

...nor any drop to drink

A view down the street



and a view up the street


Newsflash: it stopped raining here about 15 minutes ago.

Fay is moving north at 2 MPH...must be stuck in traffic or something. A good chance of rain exists probably through mid-afternoon tomorrow, as Fay finally begins to move off to the north and west. Any chance we get to pump down the streets, ponds, and canals is welcome.

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When!! When!! WHEN!!!

OK...'nuff rain for us...thanks.

We're up to around 20 inches, give or take. There appears to be no quit in the storm, just when I can see a "drier" patch on the radar, it fills in with the nasty heavy stuff and the train keeps rolling the rain in. Flooding is an obvious problem. Here's an image I shot from the front door of the hodo-hut around 12:30 this afternoon:



And here's the same shot at 4 PM:

The street flooding isn't terrible here--in fact there are places where there is no water on the road at all just down the street. Watching and reading other media reports indicates things are much worse elsewhere.

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Building an Ark

Overnight, Tropical Storm Fay made it to the east coast near Sebastian, then decided to turn left and parallel the coast. The Weather Service office in Melbourne reported the center passed over their office at 2:45 AM, and I've heard other unofficial reports similar to this around 4:15 in the Suntree area.

My raingauge remains broken, but I've heard reports of 15 inch rainfall storm totals in North Melbourne. The flooding here isn't terribly bad, it's much worse in other parts of the area, but I'd still like it to stop raining soon for no other reason than the dog needs a nice long walk.

At 8 AM this morning, Fay was located at Cape Canaveral, moving not fast enough at 5 MPH toward the north. Wind speeds are down to 45 MPH and the pressure has risen to 994 mb.

The forecast track has Fay running parallel to the coast and recurving back to the west just north of Daytona as a tropical storm--some increase in strength is forecast, but Fay isn't expected to become a hurricane before landfall. From Daytona, Fay heads straight for Tallahassee.

Currently there's a large shield of rain from North Melbourne south to Ft Pierce, that I fear might move toward the north with Fay. If so, the rain is unlikely to end here for the rest of the day.

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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Who said weakening?

I told you we're not very good at this intensity thing, didn't I?

During the day, Fay intensified--yes, over land--rather than weakened. The central pressure fell by a couple of millibars and the maximum winds increased from 60 to 65 MPH. Not a huge change, however, the increased organization has prompted changes to the forecast track and (if you're still willing to believe it) intensity forecast. The reasons for strengthening over land rather than the expected weakening aren't immediately clear. Certainly the terrain of Florida is nothing like that over Hispaniola, so we weren't expecting the system to be shredded to bits. I would dispute the effects of Lake Okeechobee or the Everglades as a nice warm water source, as I don't think the circulation center ever went over those areas. It's possible the added friction over Florida helped to consolidate the ragged center into one coherent center. Additionally, throughout its history, Fay has been able to maintain a rather robust mid-level circulation (it's looked much more impressive on satellite than it really was).

As I type, the worst of the storm so far has just moved through this area. Numerous rotating cells were seen on the Melbourne radar, prompting tornado warnings for our area. Additional intense cells are will be moving into the region through the night. It might be a good idea to turn on the weather radio tonight.

Fay is moving toward the north-northeast at 8 MPH. The track has become more, ahem, interesting. The new track has Fay crossing the east coast at Melbourne as a tropical storm overnight tonight. It will then swing out into the Atlantic around Daytona making landfall near Jacksonville Thursday afternoon. Most of the strength with Fay to this point has been on the east side of the storm, meaning there is a greater threat for severe weather in the southern part of Brevard compared to the northern sections on this forecast track. If you're willing to try another intensity forecast, while over the ocean, Fay is expected to strengthen to a Cat 1 hurricane.

Radar estimated precip totals are around 4 inches in this area, with more to come. My raingauge naturally failed to work today, but my pool needs to be pumped down a bit, so 4 inches seems about right.

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Underwear Day II

Well, not quite, but not far from it either. With many things closed, and a not so stressful tropical system on the way, today kinda has that snow day feel.

Fay made keyfall at Key West yesterday afternoon, and then arrived ashore near Cape Romano (near Naples) early this morning. Fay never achieved hurricane strength, and maximum winds so far were estimated to be 60 MPH, which also remains the current (8 AM ET) estimated maximum wind speed. Fay was able to organize and strengthen during the day yesterday despite wind shear and dry air, and a circulation center is clearly visible on the Miami radar loop, and is now visible on the Melbourne radar. However, slow weakening over land is expected over the next few days. Fay is moving toward the north-northeast at 9 MPH, and this motion will slow and turn toward the north (left) during the day today. Central pressure is currently 988 mb.

The forecast has been a rather difficult one, prompting more than a few "do you guys know what you're doing?" comments over the last couple days. The forecast calls for Fay to maintain its current heading, which will move the center between Orlando and Melbourne around 2 AM Wednesday. It is forecast to move offshore between Cape Canaveral and Daytona, spend about 24 hours offshore before looping back west and making a third landfall (a statistic not lost on insurance executives) near Jacksonville. This westward loop is caused by high pressure building in from the northeast US; the strength of this high is the forecast question of the day. A weaker high pressure area allows Fay to move farther north away from us. Currently little increase in strength over the Atlantic is expected.

Since we will find ourselves on the eastern half of a landfalling tropical storm, the primary local impacts will be wind, rain, and tornadoes. So far most of the heavy rainbands have remained offshore, but as the center approaches this threat will increase.

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Monday, August 18, 2008

Ill-defined Fay slows; forecast remains uncertain

The problems forecasting a poorly defined tropical storm in weak steering currents are on full display with Fay this morning. During the day yesterday, Fay slowed her forward speed and began the turn to the north. Currently located inland over central Cuba, Fay is moving toward the north-northwest at 12 MPH and has maximum sustained winds of 50 MPH. The surface center is not located under all of the convection seen on satellite, nor is it located under the swirl apparent on the radar from Key West. The system is tilted: the upper level circulations are found north and east of the surface circulation. Tropical systems usually aren't tilted, so it would seem it might need to get the core stacked back together before any explosive development occurs.

The north-northwest motion is expected to continue for the next 24 hours with a gradual turn toward the north expected Tuesday. Fay has reached the western extent of the high pressure ridge that has been located to it's north for the last few days. Keep in mind that these types of weak systems don't make a nice smooth turn as you watch short-term radar and satellite loops, but will instead jog a little bit one way, then back another. The long-term motion appears much smoother than it does in the short term.

The forecast remains in agreement for the first, oh, 48 hours or so, taking Fay inland somewhere between Tampa and Ft Myers and bending a little toward the north east after that. Landfall is expected during the afternoon Tuesday, which is a little slower than previously expected. The official forecast is to the right (east) of the model consensus during this period.

Beyond that, the models at times have unfortunately provided more entertainment value than forecast value. This is because they are hinting that another ridge developing northeast of Florida later in the week, effectively blocking Fay's path to the north. We've even got one model solution that predicts three landfalls in Florida during the week: one on the southwest coast emerging into the Atlantic, Fay then turns west and makes a second landfall along the east central coast, proceeds across the state and makes a final landfall on the Panhandle. Point here is that the long term forecast continues to have more uncertainty than usual, and there is an outside chance we'll be watching Fay for another week.

The intensity forecast is likewise uncertain, though we do understand a few things here. The system is currently over land and is poorly defined, so not much will happen there. Fay will probably become a Cat 1 hurricane prior to landfall as it moves north over warm water, but probably not much stronger than that.

The Hurricane Center is making more noise than usual about its "don't follow the thin black line, look at the wind swath" mantra, which, of course, is correct. We've seen over the last few days that small changes in the forecast models are reflected in somewhat big changes in the track (the thin black line), but really don't change the windspeed forecasts very much. At the end of the day, we're worried about wind and storm damage, not if the storm center passes over us. For now, we have about a 50% chance of tropical storm force winds, 10-20% chance of 58 MPH winds, and less than 10% change of hurricane force winds.

At 5 AM this morning, a TS watch was issued for the east coast from Jupiter to Sebastian. I suspect that will also be issued for Brevard later today. A TS warning is in effect for Jupiter south to the Keys this morning. At this point it's unclear when additional warnings will be issued for our area.

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Sunday, August 17, 2008

Along the Gulf Coast

The track of TS Fay has come into somewhat better focus over the last day. There remains a fair bit of uncertainty, but for now it appears the threat to our neck of the swamp is a little less compared to this time yesterday.

At 8 AM Sunday, Fay was a tropical storm with max winds of 50 MPH located along the southern coast of Cuba. Movement is to the west-northwest at 13 MPH. Aircraft are sampling the storm, but since the center is rather close to land, sampling the center is difficult.

The forecast calls for Fay to slow its forward speed and begin a turn toward the northwest during the day today as the western flank of the high pressure ridge to the north (over FL) erodes. Obviously where this turn begins has implications for Florida. The current NHC forecast has the turn occurring such that Fay essentially crosses Key West. An earlier or sharper turn brings the storm closer to us, however on this track Fay would spend less time over water, so a relatively weaker storm would result. If the turn occurs farther west, the track would also be farther west, but Fay would probably be a stronger storm resulting from more time over water.

The forecast model solution envelope does have some reliable models tracking Fay along the eastern side of Florida. Keep in mind that the typical track errors for these models make a rather large difference as to whether the storm heads up the eastern or western side of the state. There are some models that are also west of the official forecast, and we've got a couple "ghost of Charlie" solutions moving Fay northeast across the state, entering around Ft Myers and exiting north of Daytona. Fay is expected to be weaker than Charlie, so while the tracks might end up similar, the impacts of Fay should be less. The official forecast has Fay turning soon, so we should have an idea sometime today how the forecast is evolving.

Watches and warnings have been issued for Florida this morning. Mandatory evacuation of visitors from the Keys begins this morning. On the east coast, TS watches are in effect as far north as Jupiter. As time goes on, these will likely be extended north into our area, however the type of warning remains an open question. If a hurricane warning is issued for this area, you can expect all of the typical actions (evacuations, causeway and school closings). If Fay follows the forecast, I'm not sure a hurricane warning will be needed, however, with the unexpected right-turn of Charley relatively fresh in everyone's mind, I expect one will be issued following the "better safe than sorry" paradigm. Of course, if that Charlie-like across the state track (in near Ft Myers, out at Daytona) verifies, then those warnings would be more likely.

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Saturday, August 16, 2008

Still uncertain

As you've no doubt heard by now, yesterday the Hurricane Center finally found a closed circulation and classified the wave as "Fay". Unfortunately, it appears it will be at least another day before we're even a little certain where she'll go.

This morning, the center remains hard to find, as the storm is located somewhere over Hispaniola. Hispaniola is the most rugged of the Greater Antilles and has a well-earned reputation for disrupting well established tropical cyclones. Despite the impressive satellite presentation, Fay doesn't qualify (yet) as well established. As such, complete destruction isn't expected and, in fact, one might be able to argue the center is reforming to the south of the island.

Of course, what everyone wants (needs?) to know concerns the future track. Currently the storm is steered to the west by a ridge of high pressure to the north over Florida. Fay is expected to move around the western edge of this ridge over the next 5 days, making the evolution of this ridge rather important. On Friday, the general model consensus was for a track in the eastern Gulf of Mexico and landfall in the panhandle area. There is a hint the models early this morning have shifted eastward, bringing the storm over Florida on a Charlie (2004) type path. If Fay remains south of the official track, I think that would argue for the western solution rather than the eastern solution. At this point, model solutions are much like focusing a camera (for those that remember the days before auto focus cameras). It just might take another day to get the focus right.

By now most of you have figured out that if we have little confidence in the track forecast, then we really have no idea how strong it'll get. Fay still needs to deal with landmass interactions (Cuba) however, the wind shear is low and the water temperatures resemble bathwater, so strengthening is forecast once Fay finds itself over open waters. The longer Fay remains over water allow additional strengthening. In this case, a Gulf/panhandle track would probably result in a stronger hurricane (possibly cat 4) compared to some (not all) of the east coast of Florida tracks where the storm wouldn't be over the water as much.

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

A threat

Been a while...I will say I like posting to the blog only once a year or so. However, there is a threat that has the potential to cause much of the east coast of Florida some trouble over the next week. Bottom line is that we're not really sure of the where, when, and how bad, but this is a really good time to begin to check up on all of those hurricane supplies we're supposed to have.

The area of concern is a tropical wave near the Virgin Islands. While the satellite view of this wave is quite impressive, the Hurricane Center folks haven't yet seen fit to classify it as either a tropical depression or storm (next name in the list: Fay). The wave has had a rather hard time organizing over the last three days (shear, dry air) and is really still trying to get its bearings.

Model forecasts of systems like these generally have their share of problems; mostly to do with accurately placing the storm center into the model. If you can't get the storm in the right place at the start, it's rarely gonna be in the correct place later in the simulation. It will take a couple more days before the models have a better handle on the evolution of the wave/Fay.

Given all of that meteorological modeling legal mumbo jumbo, the average model track has Fay skirting along the northern coast of Puerto Rico, Hispanola, and Cuba. Then it makes a turn right as it's tugged northward by a mid-latitude low pressure system, shooting the gap between the Bahamas and Florida, and running parallel to the Florida east coast in 5 days (Monday or Tuesday of next week). The possibility that Fay could turn left (inland into Florida) at any point cannot be discounted, since, at the extended ranges (5-10 days from now) the flow becomes weak, ill-defined, and uncertain as the aforementioned low to the north passes to the east and fails to absorb Fay.

To give you a range of the possible model solutions, we have, in the west, model tracks into the Gulf of Mexico. To the east, we've got a couple of models that take Fay through the eastern Bahamas. Not as big of a spread as we've had in the past (you could probably search the archives and turn up a couple instances of "Texas to New England"), but for now we're right in the middle of it.

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