Let's hope this goes to the fish. My gas station just rose its price from 2.31 to 2.69
Folks should keep in mind that the GFS has a known bias for overdoing intensity and that there's never been a Cat 5 landfalling north of Florida in recorded history; Hugo was a strong Cat 4 though, when it hit Charleston. Euro is running. We're starting to get to the point where a US landfall between north Florida and the Outer Banks is becoming at least a 50-50 probability and an out to sea solution is looking less likely. It would be catastrophic if some of these model scenarios play out, especially with FEMA so focused on SE Texas and SW LA.The 12Z GFS is pretty consistent with the previous run - a tiny bit south and west on the track, with a landfall somewhere around Myrtle Beach. The major difference between this run and the last is that intensity is up.
Bearing in mind the fact that we're a week out, so there's still considerable change that can happen, this looks to be a whopper of a storm. There's plenty of model support at this time for a Cat 5.
Folks should keep in mind that the GFS has a known bias for overdoing intensity and that there's never been a Cat 5 landfalling north of Florida in recorded history; Hugo was a strong Cat 4 though, when it hit Charleston. Euro is running. We're starting to get to the point where a US landfall between north Florida and the Outer Banks is becoming at least a 50-50 probability and an out to sea solution is looking less likely. It would be catastrophic if some of these model scenarios play out, especially with FEMA so focused on SE Texas and SW LA.
And tonight's model runs once again illustrate the futility of trying to use models beyond 8-9 days for anything other than a very broad idea that Irma could make landfall between Florida and the Canadian Maritimes, with no landfall at all still possible, i.e., Irma staying offshore. Tonight's CMC crushes the east coast of Florida in multiple locations, while the GFS and Euro both hammer Wilmington, NC. All three are major hits for the northeastern Bahamas and all 3 also have major impacts for hundreds of miles inland of landfall. While these models all show a landfalling east coast hurricane, that's not a given yet, as the error bars around forecasts this far out are still quite large and up the coast, but off the coast, is still possible.
But it's sooooo close to FL and then the SE coast that, to me, it's still in the "almost landfall" camp. Completely agree on the Day 5+ comment, which I've tried to stress many times in my posts. Huge uncertainties beyond that, especially out to Days 9+.Annnnnnnnnnddddddd........
At 240 hours the 12Z Euro is out to sea.
Just goes to show ya, folks - operational models in the 5+ day range are for entertainment purposes only.
#'s / Real - I believe the Euro Model tends to be the most reliable with snowstorms etc - however is it or has it been as reliable for hurricanes etc - given it appears per your posts above that the Euro is currently the only model taking Irma out to sea. Thanks, Phil
Yes, the Euro is generally the best model for cyclones, including hurricanes, but it's not like it's hugely better, just a bit better, and it's sometimes wrong. But it did nail Sandy from 7-8 days out, while others struggled with Sandy - that's the most famous "win" for the Euro with hurricanes. Also, we're 9 days out - these model runs are mostly for entertainment value as the uncertainty that far out is 500+ miles on track. It is fascinating to watch the evolution of each model in time, though, and to compare them for each suite. But people really only ought to be looking at the NHC 5-day froecast, which shows a huge impact of a Cat 4 on the SE-most Bahamas at that time.#'s / Real - I believe the Euro Model tends to be the most reliable with snowstorms etc - however is it or has it been as reliable for hurricanes etc - given it appears per your posts above that the Euro is currently the only model taking Irma out to sea. Thanks, Phil
Thanks as always. Hope all is well. Regards,PhilYes, the Euro is generally the best model for cyclones, including hurricanes, but it's not like it's hugely better, just a bit better, and it's sometimes wrong. But it did nail Sandy from 7-8 days out, while others struggled with Sandy - that's the most famous "win" for the Euro with hurricanes. Also, we're 9 days out - these model runs are mostly for entertainment value as the uncertainty that far out is 500+ miles on track. It is fascinating to watch the evolution of each model in time, though, and to compare them for each suite. But people really only ought to be looking at the NHC 5-day froecast, which shows a huge impact of a Cat 4 on the SE-most Bahamas at that time.
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I have a question regarding hurricane
Irma. Where will it be by next Saturday?
That would be good news. Thank you.Likely somewhere in the Bahamas.
That would be good news. Thank you.
My personal opinion is that the Euro and the GFS are interchangeably accurate depending upon the synoptic conditions prevalent during the period.
The Euro got high praise for "seeing" Sandy with pretty good accuracy, from a pretty good distance. This past winter, however, it got roasted on our big snowstorm, while the shorter-range NAM - a model ridiculed by many as "useless" - had that storm pegged for every minute of its duration.
In a very general sense the Euro is better for tropical systems the last several years but, in Irma's case, the GFS has been more consistent and has also verified more accurately, thus far.
This is anybody's ballgame, and will be until about Wednesday or so.
Actually, the Euro has been more accurate than the GFS (AVNO in the graphic below) and every other model, by far, with track verification, to date, on this storm, especially beyond 48 hours.
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My personal opinion is that the Euro and the GFS are interchangeably accurate depending upon the synoptic conditions prevalent during the period.
The Euro got high praise for "seeing" Sandy with pretty good accuracy, from a pretty good distance. This past winter, however, it got roasted on our big snowstorm, while the shorter-range NAM - a model ridiculed by many as "useless" - had that storm pegged for every minute of its duration.
In a very general sense the Euro is better for tropical systems the last several years but, in Irma's case, the GFS has been more consistent and has also verified more accurately, thus far.
This is anybody's ballgame, and will be until about Wednesday or so.
And another suite of runs that mostly show a hurricane making landfall on the US East Coast, with almost all of them battering the Bahamas as a likely cat 4/5 before doing so. GFS crushes the Myrtle Beach area and the CMC hammers Savannah (very unlikely - they haven't sustained a major hurricane hit in a long time, although hurricanes hit the GA coast more frequently in the 1800s for some reason), with the storm then wreaking havoc inland for days.
The Euro makes a close pass to the entire Florida coast (reminiscent of last year's Matthew), before moving back NE and making a close pass (~100 miles or so) to the SC/NC coasts, but not making landfall, before starting to head ENE, out to sea. Unfortunately, the operational model only goes out to Day 10, where it's several hundred miles off the NC coast. However, despite the "miss" it's so close to FL and then the SE coasts that it would only take small changes for the Euro to still show a hit. .
Still 8-10 days out from a landfall, depending how far north it is, but the consensus (except for the Euro, now, although it's so close to still "count" as a potential landfall this far out) is certainly growing for a possible landfall somewhere between northern Florida and the Outer Banks, with south Florida and up to New England still possible. Out to sea is becoming less likely, but is not out of the picture, as the evolution of an approaching trough across the US and the Western Atlantic Ridge (high pressure), among other players, is still pretty uncertain this far out.
So, the 0Z model suite is out and all of the major models have a US landfall, although we're still 7+ days out from that and uncertainty is still pretty high on the track, such that a US landfall is not a given (out to sea is still possible). . The GFS and CMC both take Irma straight up the center of the Florida peninsula from the bottom (in the Keys around Day 7/8) to nearly the top (by Day 8/9), i.e., about 50-75 miles inland from either coast. Highly unlikely, but potentially devastating for a cat 4 hurricane, which won't lose much punch from interaction with the very flat landscape of Florida. The Euro shows Irma again just missing South Florida at Day 7/8 and riding up, just off the east coast of the peninsula, followed by a landfall near Myrtle Beach SC on Day 9 (Tuesday, 9/12). For all 3 scenarios, a landfalling major hurricane will obviously have devastating effects near the coast, as well as hundreds of miles inland from wherever that landfall takes place.
However, what I find very interesting is that both the Euro and GFS show Irma coming very close to Cuba in the 120 hour range, whereas the NHC predicted location at 120 hours is the Central Bahamas, about 75-100 miles NE of where the Euro/GFS have Irma at that time; see the graphics below (if Irma does get close to or hit Cuba, the land interactions could have a significant weakening impact on the storm). And the NHC has seen these model outputs, so clearly they don't quite agree with the Euro/GFS tracks at 120 hours or so. May not sound like much, but 75 miles is the difference between a storm coming up the center of the Florida peninsula vs. coming up just off the coast of Florida, a la Matthew last year. The CMC looks to be almost in the exact same location in the Central Bahamas at 114 hours, 12 hours earlier than when the NHC has Irma in that location (120 hours from the NHC is 126 hours for the 0Z model suite, as the NHC has a 2 am EDT initial condition, vs. the models' initial condition of 8 pm EDT, I believe). And yet the CMC also comes up the center of the FL peninsula.
The point of all of this isn't so much to debate where Irma might make a US landfall, but that a US landfall is now probably more than a 50% probability, somwhere between Florida and the Carolinas. An out to sea solution is still quite possible, though, especially given that the "players" that will ultimately drive the track of the storm aren't even in North America yet, such as the eventual trough that will be approaching the east coast in a week and an upper level low feature in SE Canada; in addition, the eventual position of the Western Atlantic ridge, which is in place, is in question). Actually, TWC guys have done a great job explaining how these features can greatly influence a landfall scenario vs. an out to sea scenario. One near certainty at this time: much of the Bahamas is going to be raked by a Cat 3/4 hurricane (within the 5-6 day period), with the potential to reach Cat 5.
FYI, the odds on a NJ/NYC landfall are now very low, as the storm will come too far west before the turn to the NW/N - we need a track where the turn happens sooner (further east) so that the storm can miss hitting FL/GA/SC/NC and then be "pulled" west into our area, a la Sandy. However, we could certainly be in for a lot of rain from the remnants of any storm that makes landfall, depending on where it strikes (if it does) and how far inland it goes. Some of our worst storms in history, especially from a flooding perspective, were remnants, like Agnes in 1972 or tropical storms after hurricanes weakened after landfall, like Floyd in 1999.
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Does this mean it's looking like a Florida landfall?
Certainly possible it goes into the Gulf of Mexico, as that's beyond Day 6/7, where track acuracy usually is poor, although with none of the global or hurricane models currently showing a track into the GOM, it's highly unlikely.can this track push the storm into the gulf with two potential landfalls in the US?
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I fear for all those Virgin Islands and Bahamas weddings and cruises.. maybe event the Keys.. certainly looks like Puerto Rico will be hit. Thanks for all the updates guys.
ahhh.. the high-variance lifestyle... wouldn't the boat just stay in port?.. or is it more like a cruise for storm-chasers?I've always wanted to do a bareboat charter in the Bahamas in September. It's pretty near the top of my to-do list. The charter rates are really low, for obvious reasons, and there's the slight chance you get to see some serious weather from the perspective of a 40' sailboat. Which is awesome.
ahhh.. the high-variance lifestyle... wouldn't the boat just stay in port?.. or is it more like a cruise for storm-chasers?
Numbers, can you post the updated Global Model Runs. I'd like to see the overall shift in trend from up the US coast to GOM. As of 12z, as you posted yesterday, only the CMC was predicting this path.While the model spread from today's 12Z runs might look large, this spread at 8-9 days is less than usual. Quite a few landfalls in the Florida to OBX area, but not all, of course. So, we watch.
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