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We be ler'n more 'bout 'Canes
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Tropical storms for this year are:
Andrea Barry Chantal Dean Erin Felix Gabrielle Humberto Ingrid Jerry Karen Lorenzo Melissa Noel Olga Pablo Rebekah Sebastien Tanya Van Wendy Quietly moving up the east coast is the second Atlantic tropical storm of the year - Barry. In the Pacific and ongoing is Barbara - also a second tropical storm. Projection for Barry from the National Hurricane Center: |
Thank GOD! Finally some rain. I we could just it to stall out over the coast for about a week we would be good to go.
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It's the chav/trailer-park naming theme then, this year?
The should go for the wuss theme. Can you imagine being pummeled by a storm called Arielle, Barnaby, Clarissa, Dillon ... Jervais ... Mortimer ... |
i have a sincere sense of foreboding about Olga.
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Humberto?
Wendy? Yikes. |
Imagine that, a storm named.... Wendy
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The thread title threw me off a little. I expected a big lecture from tw about our lack of understanding of how hurricane seasons vary from year to year. Just heard on NPR the other day that while there is some correlation with average Atlantic temperature, it doesn't match that closely. A better match is the el Nino/la Nina cycle. Got no links for you, as it was just a report on the radio.
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Ya, I recently sat through part of a NASA presentation that gave the impression that water temperature was the main factor, but I think you're right about el Nino. They do have some neat tech developing to predict rainfall by looking inside a hurricane now, cool stuff.
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Each year tw takes more letters out of his hurricane thread titles. A few more and we'll be looking at something like
B Lrn Mo Canz |
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Chantal will play nice, but she'll cut you if you cross her.
Here's 150 years of storms. |
Great pic Bruce.
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And that concentration of Force Five tracks in WestPac correlates with the wellspring of El Nin~o sea current flows, doesn't it?
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We wouldn't mind a bit of el fucking nino down this way thankyou very bloody much!
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Yeah, the paucity of big-ole-rainy-storm tracks through your latitudes does illustrate that dryness problem in a big way. Anyone have an idea why such hemispheric asymmetry?
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There is a lot of talk about el nino, but I don't know if that's true or not. I think we just need rain and there isn't any.
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Awesome image, btw, xoB, thanks. |
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We get cyclones. They're no where near the size of hurricanes tw. That would explain their limited lifespan once they hit the coast.
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A third tropical storm - Chantal - has finally formed off of NE United States. Unusual is for a storm to form this far north. More unusual is its projected course - just south of Greenland and by Friday approaching Iceland. Predicted track shown below.
However that is not the significant event this week. Like last year, storms from Africa crossed the Atlantic, stayed below 10 degrees N latitude, and did not veer north until arriving in Panama or Eastern Pacific. Well the Pacific already has its five tropical storm. One even threatened the big island of Hawaii. This week, that storm track moved north. A potential storm was forming just north of Brazil (rather than crossing Brazil). If this trend continues as predicted, the 2007 Hurricane race has just begun. |
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An excerpt from satellite images of 31 July shows storm tracks from Africa (right) and curving northward across the Atlantic towards Cuba (left). Some storms in the old track across northern South America and Costa Rica are still observed.
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Hurricane Dean is expected to be approaching Puerto Rico on Saturday. Assuming it continues this same curving path, Dean should arrive somewhere between northern FL and the US east coast. This storm has been developing so early since leaving Africa as to be worth significant attention. It will probably skim up the east coast - remain at sea. But we really will not know until maybe the 20th of Aug.
Start looking for sales on hurricane party goods. Mid Atlantic US residents have not had a good reason for a hurricane party in a long time. If you invite Erin, Felix, Gabrielle or Ingrid, they might have such a good time as to return. Select your guest list with care. |
I hope it stays about 50 to 100 miles offshoe and tears up the hot water thats been out there for 2 moths - Thats just what the fishin needs!
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personally, a cat 1 or 2 is perfect. couple days off work, paid... hurricane parties... an impromptu boozefest is always fun.
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Ah, Dean, please don't go into the gulf. http://icons.wunderground.com/data/i...0704_model.gif |
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A Tropical Storm watch has in fact been issued for coastal Texas.
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Would have been helpful if the system had gone to the parched AL/MS area. |
So maybe it will sink NO this time for good.
None of the Dean models seem to say anything about it heading up the east coast. http://intellicast.com/Storm/Hurrica...m=2&type=track |
Hurricane Felix was not even a depression until it arrived a few hundred miles east of the Windward Antilles. Behind it is another cyclonic action that could become something 'tropical' once it arrives in the same warm water.
Storms that roll off Africa encounter water that is at New Jersey ocean temperatures. These storms attract no attention until warmer water is found. Warmer water of the Caribbean has created some hurricanes such as Dean - a category 5. But most storms have still continued across Central America to create eight tropical storms and eleven tropical depressions. One even threatened Hawaii. Unlike 2005, Atlantic water has been cooler. Even the Caribbean and Gulf have been cooler. Current storm track does not even threaten anything north of Cuba. Felix will probably cross Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. Next mid-Atlantic storm is following and probably will be ignored until it also finds the same warm water that energized Felix. |
Wow. Only two days ago it was not even a tropical despression. Now Felix is a category five hurricane.
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Here's a picture of the hurricane Felix eyewall, at night, by moonlight. It was taken from a plane flown by the Hurricane Hunters at Keesler AFB, MS.
Wunderground has another picture of the eyewall and pictures of the radar. It mentions it was a rough flight and the NOAA plane also took a beating at the Northeast eyewall. |
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It has been as if God suddenly puts up a wall to protect Florida, or hates northen Georgia. Whereas tropical storms might be five in a season, we now have the fourteenth - tropical storm Noel. Western Atlantic tropical depression has experienced 20 tropical depressions. Eastern Pacific, where most of the potential tropical storms when to, had about as many. Most storms pass over or just north of South America, or veered off like a retired Englishman visiting his home country.
Noel did not get the National Hurricane Center's attention until yesterday when it was just east of the Dominican Republic and was not predicted to intensify. Latest prediction is that Noel will bounce off that invisible Florida wall and head for Bermuda. |
http://www.coaps.fsu.edu/~maue/tropical/
Where is all the talk about Golbal Warming and the new age of super storms? |
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Pardon me while I relax and move even closer to the coast. |
I live 5 miles from open ocean. :D
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One mile makes a difference, right? :unsure: |
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lNoel is an overachiever. He became a hurricane tonight. He may even skirt closer to Cape Cod. A November hurricane in another season that has seen something we rarely ever saw category five hurricanes - and multiple.
This year, even Shanghai was threatened by a massive hurricane that fortunately verged off by something like 100 miles. That would have been equivalent to a category four striking NYC. There are no plans for hurricanes of that size striking the American mid east coast. Its just not suppose to happen. Noel may be the end of this thread. Nobody expects hurricanes in November. It just never happened. And more than one category five in a decade? Almost unheard of. God's hurricane wall around FL appears to have worked this year. |
at least noel provided some late season and much needed rains. we're still on water restrictions here.
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Apparently god loves to tease N and W Georgia, Tennessee, and central North Carolina. Put what they need a few hundred miles away. Hold Noel out there like a carrot on a stick. Bad Noel. Is there ever a good hurricane?
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what do you think is going to happen when you cut down 99% (literally) of the vegetation on an island in the middle of the caribbean? I'm not saying that those people deserve to die - not at all. I know I'm lucky in this life, and my heart goes out to all of those who are less fortunate. I'm just saying, it's expected that any kind of tropical system - even the weakest tropical storm will cause loss of life in those island nations. And some of it, sadly, is their own fault. |
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Global and Northern Hemisphere Tropical Cyclone Activity [still] lowest in 30-years
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(Sorry the photos are so large If a mod could reduce that'd be great) |
I don't know much about weather but storms are a function of thermodynamic energy which is fueled by temperature differentials in close proximity which, in turn, is created by ocean currents moving warm/cold water towards each other. So either the currents are slowing down or the temperature differential at each end of the current is shrinking - or some of each.
I also checked the peaks of the first graph against the 11-year sunspot cycle. No corellation. Just wondering. It might be worth checking this out against undersea volcanic and tectonic activity as well. |
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