Today marks the start of the Eastern Pacific Hurricane Season. Atlantic Outlooks also begin today.
Days since last Hurricane Landfall —
US Any:
590 (Milton),
US Major:
590 (Milton),
FL Any:
590 (Milton),
FL Major:
590 (Milton)
cieldumort
Moderator
Reged:
Posts: 2664
Loc: Austin, Tx
|
Bay of Campeche Wave
Sat Aug 03 2024 01:25 PM
|
|
|

An occasionally vigorous tropical wave in the Main Development Region is continuing to show signs of it holding together long enough and tracking poleward enough to potentially be of concern next week once in the Caribbean and per some models like the GFS, especially so if/when it enters the Gulf.
While the background state for development out in the MDR is presently less than ideal, conditions are largely forecast to be increasingly hospitable in the central to western Caribbean and gulf all (potentially) along its path, and we are starting a lounge on this feature at this time.
This system is not yet Invest tagged and we will update the title as changes are made. More details to come soon.
This feature has gone on to help spin up 98E in the eastern Pacific which has a window to develop, and a small area of weak low pressure within remnant northern portions in the Bay of Campeche as of Aug 10, but TC genesis remains unlikely there. Ciel
Edited by cieldumort (Sat Aug 10 2024 05:27 PM)
|
|
0 registered and 2 anonymous users are browsing this forum.
Moderator:
|
Forum Permissions
You cannot start new topics
You cannot reply to topics
HTML is disabled
UBBCode is enabled
|
Rating:
Thread views: 5425
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: This is
NOT an official page. It is run by weather hobbyists and should not be used as a replacement for official sources.
CFHC's main servers are currently located at
Hostdime.com in Orlando, FL.
Image Server Network thanks to Mike Potts and Amazon Web Services. If you have static file hosting space that allows dns aliasing contact us to help out! Some Maps Provided by:
Great thanks to all who
donated and everyone who uses the site as well.
Site designed for 800x600+ resolution
When in doubt, take the word of the
National Hurricane Center