Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog |
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| Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 12:17 PM GMT on July 04, 2010 | +2 |

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Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.
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Hey its a shock to me Taz, I had to post it to make sense of it. 95L will likely be TS Bonnie before landfall judging from that ASCAT pass.
It wasn't Forecast! LOL
pfffth....
I aint nuthing but a dude..
We all saw the system had potential..it just was the focus was on 96L.
And that will shift back soon nuff rightfully so.
I agree with you if that map is up to date and recent.
welcome to the addiction.
No cussin' no name-callin, no firearms.
Yeah...honestly. It drives me nuts. 95L is classifiable but this was not?
it is now tropical, but it could still be attached to the front
I am just not sure how the chances all of a sudden go up so quickly
I had a second light shower now XD
Well there goes our sunny days :\
dont re call that storm when was this
Of course not, *answers while covering his eyes*
LOL!
Dem guys have a lotta constraints aquak9..and I'd hate to be in dem shoes.
We seen a lotta like these and the Cindy climo tie in was like destiny for this one.
Thanx for the kind word.
We all send ya'll Holiday Hugs too.
Storm - Just to be clear, the (storm) I mentioned was referring to 95L and not you. I appreciate your thoughtful analysis. I just find it ironic after yesterday afternoon's blog sniping that NHC jumps on board 50 miles before landfall.
Whether justified or not, the NHC blew it on this one. They are either going to be seen as inconsistent for naming a storm with conditions they said they wouldn't or said to be caught napping.
Near 0% to 60% in 3 hours. That's got to be a record. :)
And, that's respectfully said, too, StormW.
only 3-4 days of sunshine...this sucked....
Props to 95L....hope no one is hurt by it....
We've had well over an inch here. We have had very TROPICAL type rains. Very heavy, with little lightning.
For the most part, winds switch from SE on the east side to E (along the frontal boundary) west of the system.
Agreed. Never underestimated Mother Nature because Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned!
LOL...true....from 0 to 60 in 5 seconds! She's got some pick-me-up!
I called for 95L to be a TD at land fall a few days ago....
Kinda Crazy.... I almost thought it would never make it.
Also reminds me of the noname storm that came ashore
on Dauphin Island last year.... mmmmmm
Taco :o)
What? Might want to look again...Those coordinates are in the NW Caribbean...
Google is a wondrous thing...BING!
Not
Hardly
Consistent
not even close to land
19N 85.6W is about 135 SE of Cozumel
but if there is a closed low and Tropical Storm force winds occur on
the coast they are gonna catch considerable heat for not classifying it.
That's over water and due south of the extreme western tip of Cuba or the Yucatan channel.
September 2008.
4:30 pm CDT today
Coastal Flood Watch
... Coastal Flood Watch in effect from late tonight through Wednesday
afternoon...
The National Weather Service in New Orleans has issued a coastal
Flood Watch... which is in effect from late tonight through
Wednesday afternoon.
The combination of high astronomical tides... above normal water
levels... and increasing southeast winds will give the potential
for coastal flooding around high tide Tuesday morning and
Wednesday morning. The threat for coastal flooding is higher with
the Wednesday morning high Tide.
Water levels are currently 1 to 2 feet above normal. Tuesday
morning high tides are generally between 7 and 10 am CDT. Tides
may reach 2 to locally 3 feet above normal values.
Wednesday morning high tides... between about 8 and 11 am
CDT... are expected to run 2 to 3 feet... and locally higher... above
predicted astronomical values.
Precautionary/preparedness actions...
Flooding may result in water covering roadways and low lying
property around high tide in coastal areas along the Mississippi
coast... and near tidal lakes... outside of hurricane protection
levees in southeast Louisiana.
A coastal Flood Watch means that conditions favorable for
flooding are expected to develop. Coastal residents should be
alert for later statements or warnings... and take action to
protect property.
0% chance of development. Now its 60%.
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