MikeC
Admin
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Loc: Orlando, FL
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A note to all for a Merry Christmas, Happy New Year and a hope that next year is the quietest storm year ever. After this year. In the spirit of giving much help to those who have been affected by this year's storms. We wish everyone the best and hope for the next year.
That said, we'll be ready for next year regardless of what happens. I'm looking forward to adding more new features to the site, and welcome some new meterologists to help out with the blogs as we watch the storm season next year. We focus primarily on the Atlantic Hurricane season just because it can be taxing on all involved. Other weather sites can cover winter storms and other basins, and we wish them the best too. However, we will stick to what we know and hope to increase the knowledge on the storms that more people can be prepared and know more when they come around again.
Next year's Hurricane season runs from June 1st to November 30th. No repeats of the last two years, please.
Clark Evans has an excellent blog series about this year that you can read below (Click his name below to read more parts of the story)
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Random Chaos
Weather Analyst
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Loc: Maryland
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Happy New Year! (since I'm posting after Christmas, I hope everyone had a good one)
Here are the 2006 Atlantic names:
Alberto
Beryl
Chris
Debby
Ernesto
Florence
Gordon
Helene
Isaac
Joyce
Kirk
Leslie
Michael
Nadine
Oscar
Patty
Rafael
Sandy
Tony
Valerie
William
P.S. - will this thread get moved to the 2006 forum when it goes up?
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Clark
Meteorologist
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The last two incarnations of Alberto, in 1994 and 2000, have been very pesky storms. In 1994, Alberto moved inland near Destin/Ft. Walton Beach in Florida, stalling out across central Georgia and Alabama thereafter and bringing some very heavy rain totals to the region. In 2000, Alberto formed at a very far east longitude -- 18W -- and performed a loop over the central Atlantic waters after it looked like it'd become and get out of our hair. It peaked as a major hurricane and ultimately headed toward Iceland as an low pressure system. It was trackable for 3 weeks, quite some time for an Atlantic system. Here's hoping the 2006 incarnation of Alberto's nothing like those two.
-------------------- Current Tropical Model Output Plots
(or view them on the main page for any active Atlantic storms!)
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damejune2
Storm Tracker
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Loc: Torrington, CT
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A few years back didnt we have a "Gordon" named storm that did all kinds of loops in and around the east coast of Fla? I remember a system that came up the east coast of Fla, made a turn to the atlantic and then came back again and then did yet another loop! Wacky!
-------------------- Gloria 1985 (Eye passed over my house in...get this...northwestern CT!)
Edited by damejune2 (Wed Dec 28 2005 07:44 PM)
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MapMaster
Weather Guru
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Yep.
Also..take a look at this in the EPAC...plus there is quite a blowup in the same areas where we had other development in Dec....
http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES
MapMaster
(edited to fix link; that site doesn't allow you to link directly to images -Clark)
Edited by Clark (Wed Dec 28 2005 08:15 PM)
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Clark
Meteorologist
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Margie brought the E. Atlantic feature to my attention earlier today. In short, those sorts of features are pretty common for this time of year in the central/eastern subtropical Atlantic. It's never really going to get the chance to detach from the upper-level pattern, which is pretty progressive across the US and into the central Atlantic, and shear values are quite high and not likely to get any or much lower. None of the models are calling for any surface development, either, and my feeling is that if anything were to get going it would be highly baroclinic (nontropical) in nature and probably move around the east side of the feature and then get caught up in the strong westerlies. Never say never, but I don't give that much of a shot at all...1% maybe, if that?
Out in the eastern Pacific, strong midlatitude weather systems continually tap what we call "the Pineapple Express," or the subtropical jet stream, oftentimes enhancing convection in the vicinity of the where it reaches that far south. That's what's going on now. Convection may periodically flare, but I don't think that's any threat for any development -- again, too much shear, and the waters are quite chilly (relatively speaking as compared to summer) out that way right now.
Just my two cents.
-------------------- Current Tropical Model Output Plots
(or view them on the main page for any active Atlantic storms!)
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Random Chaos
Weather Analyst
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Loc: Maryland
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Quote:
(edited to fix link; that site doesn't allow you to link directly to images -Clark)
Actually, you can link directly to images, but you have to use another source. I should write some PHP code for Atlantic storms to get that sometime...it's a PAIN to type in manually.
Here is how to do it:
wwwghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/get-goes?{args}, where args are described on this page: http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/GOES/getsatellite.html
I usually pull the Lat/Lon off the latest Recon or report. It's unfortunate that you can't just do a conversion from POST to GET to grab the info and make it work, but the POST page sends click coords whereas the GET page requires Lat/Lon, plus the POST page sends everything uppercase (required to work) and the GET page requires everything lowercase (why couldn't they just do a case conversion in their CGI so both work both ways?).
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eduardo sanchez
Registered User
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Loc: spain
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FELIZ NAVIDAD A TODOS DESDE ESPAÑA, EUROPA!! soy nuevo en este sitio espero que me permitais de buen grado expresarme en español. Esta fue mi primera temporada de huracanes en el atlantico en que tuvimos dos perturbaciones en mi pais.Desde aqui espero aportaros otra pespectiva desde el otro lado del atlantico. MERRY CHRISTMAS !!
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Clark
Meteorologist
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Saludos, Eduardo!
For those not well-versed in Spanish, Eduardo was saying that this is his first time to the website, so he hopes that he is allowed to speak in Spanish. This was his first Atlantic hurricane season, one in which he experienced two storms in his country. Now, he waits for another perspective from the other side of the Atlantic.
Eduardo, I'm not well-versed in Spanish myself though I can pick up a bit from the French I know, so pardon me for speaking in English. It certainly was an interesting hurricane season, the first time any of us have seen anything impact your country. We learned a lot from those storms, though, and hope that your country wasn't negatively impacted by them. I hope you'll stop by on occasion, whether or not you all see another storm next year -- the more the merrier!
-------------------- Current Tropical Model Output Plots
(or view them on the main page for any active Atlantic storms!)
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Robert
Weather Analyst
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Loc: Southeast, FL
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Anyone notice the low pressure in the east atlantic looks sub tropical i have been watching it for a few days and it originated off africa and moved nw looks its best right now starting to wrap up. plus water temps are the highest there in the means then anywhere in the atlantic.
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Margie
Senior Storm Chaser
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Loc: Twin Cities
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Also, in Spain, Dec 28th is Holy Innocents Day...better known as our version of "April Fools Day."
No se váya, Eduardo...maybe we'll have a New Year's surprise as well.
-------------------- Katrina's Surge: http://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/Katrinas_surge_contents.asp
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eduardo sanchez
Registered User
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Thanks, Clark and Margie , pardon by my english.I hope that next year he is less hard than the previous. I observes with detail the season of hurricanes from Internet, every year I do it, this year has been impressive.In my coutry Vince and Delta was not very hard, although Delta in the Canary Islands it caused to many material damages.The next year I will be in order to give my vision from this side of the Atlantico. Happy New Year for all, and pardon by my english.
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Clark
Meteorologist
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No problem, Eduardo.
Margie -- I had heard about that somewhere, but didn't even think about it here. No worries.
I just posted the last article in the series of the 2005 season-in-review. They aren't nearly as detailed as the preliminary reports, but they are out sooner (except for the 6 that are currently available). With this last one, I tried to add in some more information toward understanding those high-latitude storms, such as Vince, Delta, and Epsilon. I personally liked doing the shorter months better than, say, August and September just because of being able to discuss what happened moreso than having a large number of storms to tackle with each report (and keep them *reasonably* small). I've also gone back and added another paragraph to the October summary at the end of 's discussion, this one touching upon storm size.
Intrigued by what's going on out northwest of the Cape Verdes, certainly moreso than I was, but it has a very short window that is already closing. More of the models are calling for some surface development out there now than before (well, two versus zero), but it still is not a likely candidate for any development.
Happy New Year, everyone!
-------------------- Current Tropical Model Output Plots
(or view them on the main page for any active Atlantic storms!)
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danielw
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Loc: Hattiesburg,MS (31.3N 89.3W)
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NHC, and others are watching that area too.
...A SURFACE TROUGH LIES ALONG 38W FROM 16N-22N. THERE IS
SOME POTENTIAL FOR THIS TROUGH TO DEVELOP INTO A CLOSED SURFACE
LOW OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS.
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/refresh/MIATWDAT+shtml/292344.shtml?
I hope everyone is enjoying the Holidays. Whether it's Christmas, Hanukkah,or Kwanzaa. Here's to hoping 2006 defies the odds in the opposite direction. ?Year of no Hurricanes?...We can always Hope.
Happy New Year, and keep it Safe.
Danny
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HanKFranK
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check out the low near 24/38. it was flashing convection yesterday, but overnight it's burst some deeper stuff and the whole thing has a curved structure. was placing the center sw of the convection, so visibles should confirm that. if there's a low underneath that convection, though... we may be talking about another hybrid.
HF 0924z30december
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Random Chaos
Weather Analyst
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Loc: Maryland
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NRL has issued an Invest in the Atlantic (97L) for this thing. It sure looks like a cyclone on visible.
SSD has Dvorak at 2.5 - that's borderline Tropical/Subtropical Storm usually.
NRL:
97L
Visible
Microwave
Edit: fixed links
Edited by Random Chaos (Fri Dec 30 2005 02:06 PM)
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Hurricane Dad
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Look at this excerpt from the latest Atlantic Tropical Weather Discussion
FIRST VISIBLE IMAGES SHOW DEEP CONVECTION ORGANIZING IN BANDS AROUND THE CENTER AND IT IS NOT INCONCEIVABLE THAT THIS SYSTEM COULD BECOME "ZETA" BEFORE THE END OF THE YEAR.
Thoughts?
Complete discussion available at:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/refresh/MIATWDAT+shtml/301108.shtml?
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Random Chaos
Weather Analyst
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Loc: Maryland
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This storm's in a hard place to find IR images of it.
NASA GHCC - 6 Frame Animation
NASA GHCC - 12 Frame Animation
PSU
When is SSD going to stick a Floater on it so we can see the IR easily?
Anyway, looking at the IR graphics, the convection looks like it has wrapped about 75% around the core now.
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MapMaster
Weather Guru
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Looks like ZETA to me, moving nnw...or maybe it will be Alberto...but, odds are ZETA now and gone by then...if it was the 31st, could be a different story...what a way to end the year......I called this one a few days ago, just had a feeling, but, didn't expect to see what I see today!
MM
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/DATA/RT/EATL/IR4/20.jpg
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MapMaster
Weather Guru
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Looks like you were right on NY surprise!
MM
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