Sept. 10, 2018 — The "Buresh Bottom Line": Always be prepared!.....First Alert Hurricane Survival Guide... City of Jacksonville Preparedness Guide... Georgia Hurricane Guide.
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LOCAL - JACKSONVILLE & VICINITY - FLORENCE IMPACTS: An increasing easterly swell at our beaches from distant Florence which will include a heightened rip current risk through Tuesday. Thereafter - primary impacts look to be a breeze & very rough seas/surf & rip currents AS LONG AS FLORENCE STAYS NORTH & EAST OF JACKSONVILLE - stay up to date on the latest & potentially changeable forecasts. In other words, on the forecast track, Florence locally will primarily effect the beaches & ocean. All boaters should stay in port beginning Wed.
Everyone up & down the east coast of the U.S. needs to stay vigilant regarding the latest forecasts but particularly the Carolina's...
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"Florence" which became the 3rd hurricane of the '18 Atlantic season Tue.... went "major" (Cat. 3 then briefly Cat. 4) Wed. ... fell apart in the face of shear & dry air Thu. continues over the Central Atlantic & is now making the expected comeback. The tropical cyclone has - importantly - started to make the turn west/northwest & will accelerate by Tue./Wed. as a mature, powerful hurricane over the W. Atlantic reaching Jacksonville's latitude - BUT hundreds of miles to the east - late Wed./Wed. night.
It is becoming quite clear that a hit or very near hit on the U.S. east coast is likely. Since a recurve looks very unlikely, major to severe, if not catastrophic impacts can be expected on the S. & N. Carolina coasts. Don't make the mistake of getting too caught up in individual run output of any particular model.... OR in what unreliable sources might be posting.... OR tracking just the center! As for the forecast models, there was a notable shift north over the weekend but seemingly a recent stabilization pointing to the Carolina's. This could be because of the aircraft analysis that was ingested into the computer models Sat./Sunday. Virtually all reliable global models are - for now - pointing at or near the Carolina's - not far from or a little northeast of Myrtle Beach. The UKMET model has shown the greatest shift north & is now even north of the European & GFS models - showing a monster hurricane near the Gulf Stream mid to late week moving into N. Carolina. WORD OF CAUTION: I've seen previously when true aircraft observations are placed into the model analysis, the adjustment can be rather abrupt followed by a smoothing out thereafter. So let's be careful with jumping all in on the model data - still somewhat early. For now... research aircraft is scheduled to continue gathering input for forecast models through at least Tue. in addition to special atmospheric soundings across the eastern half of the U.S. (4 balloon releases instead of the standard 2). This data will be in the model initialization hopefully leading to an even more accurate long term track & intensity forecast.
Bottom line at this point: East Coast needs to stay alert & up to date & one should always be prepared for what mother nature might have in store.
It's obvious that the next upper level trough / surface cold front is leaving Florence behind.. Much now hinges on how strong high pressure will be across the N. Atlantic. All indications are that the high pressure will build in strongly - much has been the case in recent weeks. But the orientation of the high will be important for the exact track, & I am concerned that models may not be producing a strong enough high. If true then Florence's track may end up being at least somewhat farther south but still likely near the Carolina's.
As mentioned a bit earlier, the GFS, European & UKMET models have recently come into better agreement but there will probably be more swings. As the ridge builds in north of the Florence, the track should become much more straight forward - looks to be by about Tue. That's the critical point - the fork in the road - when Florence is between Bermuda & the U.S. coast with either an opportunity for a move west/northwest OR northwest. I continue to favor a scenario that takes Florence well north of Jacksonville at this time - perhaps near Myrtle Beach, BUT that's not to imply such a forecast is set in stone or that the forecast can't/won't change. STAY UP TO DATE! All of the models have done some flip-flopping & realize - as I've always said - they are just models. It does appear that steering currents will collapse at about the time Florence is nearing the coast which would add to flooding problems & beach erosion - especially north of the eye & will also make pinpointing landfall + the intensity extra problematic.
So review hurricane plans, kits & do some work on & around the house before any severe weather moves in (cleaning storm drains, gutters, etc.). It looks like direct impacts on the U.S. will be at the middle to end of the week - from approximately Sept. 12-16th or so. However, easterly swells emanating west from the hurricane are arriving at Jacksonville & other east coast beaches which will coincide with an increasing dangerous rip current risk.
Bottom line: Don't panic but always be prepared.....
On satellite imagery.... Florence is much more organized with good symmetry, decent upper level outflow & increasing banding. Now that the core is re-established & the mid & low level centers are aligning, a rapid intensification cycle appears to be occurring or imminent. There are indications that the "wing span" of Florence will increase with time so stronger winds & rough seas/surf will occur far from the center.
The map below is a mirror of the above spaghetti plots but shows an ensemble of all the model runs. DEFINITION OF ENSEMBLE MODELING: A set of forecasts that present the range of future weather possibilities. Multiple simulations are run, each with a slight variation of its initial conditions and with slightly perturbed weather models. These variations represent the inevitable uncertainty in the initial conditions and approximations in the models. They produce a range of possible weather conditions.
It's worth noting that there are model runs all the way to the U.S.... runs showing a stall... and there are model runs showing recurvature. BUT there has been a definite trend west & - recently - north the last several days. At the moment, the scales have tipped in favor of either a direct hit on the U.S. or close enough for serious impacts:
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The Saharan dust (courtesy CIMMS) imagery shows just how dry the air is over the Central & Eastern Atlantic making Florence's rapid strengthening Wed. all the more remarkable. Some of that dry air was been ingested by Florence which took a while to "shake" out. But overall, the atmosphere is more moist, the shear less & the ocean water very warm to the west of Florence. Note Helene & Isaac will be up against the dry air as the systems move west &/or northwestward.
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Florence will be traversing some very warm water:
Wave height model (GFS) forecast... European model a little more south & west which - if verifies - wave heights would be higher for NE Fl./SE Ga:
Heavy rain by late week middle east coast. Rainfall over parts of N. Carolina & Virginia may exceed 1-2 feet:
Wide view of the busy Atlantic Basin. This is only the 11th time since 1851 that there have been at least 3 active hurricanes over the Atlantic at the same time (Klotzbach). The large & long arching band of bright clouds across the N. Atlantic all the way west to the Eastern U.S. is the upper level trough that missed Florence followed by the building in of the upper level ridge:
Helene & Isaac have become a hurricanes - over the far Eastern Atlantic. Isaac will move farther west over the Atlantic as high pressure tries to assert itself across parts of the Central/Northern Atlantic & underneath Florence. Just how strong the Bermuda high is - or is not - will go a long ways in determining whether or not Isaac makes it into the Caribbean though such a track seems to be likely with the question being intensity. Shear looks to stay strong over the Caribbean in the long run which should cause Isaac - a small tropical cyclone - to weaken. The GFS & European models are very similar in this regard while the UKMET model is more northeast which would have implications for some of the Greater Antilles as well as on intensity. Issac should be approaching the islands of the Lesser Antilles by Thu./Fri. - probably as a hurricane but past its peak.
Helene, on the other hand, looks like a full recurve over the Central/ E. Atlantic as a powerful hurricane at times in its own right. Helene might interact with another system that will be developing over the N. Atlantic.... a system that could become subtropical or even tropical. Both, however, should stay far to the east over the open Atlantic.
I'm also keeping an eye on the NW Caribbean &/or Gulf of Mexico for possible longer range tropical development. There has been a persistent area of t'storms over the W. Caribbean - something to watch. Movement will be west/northwest, so this will be a Western Gulf "thing" & not a problem for Florida.
Isaac & Helene over the E. Atlantic:
Isaac:
Helene:
Mid & upper level wind shear (enemy of tropical cyclones) analysis (CIMMS). The red lines indicate strong shear. Note weaker shear in the path of Florence over the W. Atlantic while there's much stronger shear over the Caribbean......
As a whole.... the well advertised Atlantic changes - regarding potential storm development, a mini hyper season of sorts - are underway & should continue into the middle of Sept. The uptick in activity coincides with a very persistent pattern of surface & upper level high pressure anchored over or near the N. Atlantic which implies lower pressures to the south (the ol' what goes up, must come down postulate). The upper level map below from the GFS model for Wed., Sept. 12th shows the upper level trough way too far north to pull Florence north, so the storm will move west or west/northwest underneath. The orientation, position & strength of high pressure ridges will help determine how far west Florence & other tropical systems might go. Combine this set-up with the approach of the peak of the season, less shear overall, warm ocean temps., lots of moisture & a MJO pulse, & you get an active period in the tropics/Atlantic Basin.
p>The Atlantic Basin....
Caribbean:
Gulf of Mexico:
Water vapor imagery (dark blue indicates dry air) - notice the dry air right up against Florence:
Deep oceanic heat content is seasonably high over the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico & SW Atlantic as one would expect now that we're near the peak of the hurricane season....
Sea surface temp. anomalies show a general recent warming over a good portion of the Atlantic Basin including rather dramatic warming east of the Caribbean & near the NE coast of S. America ....
SE U.S. surface map:
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Surface analysis centered on the tropical Atlantic:
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Surface analysis of the Gulf:
Caribbean:
The E. Pacific remains a busy basin. Olivia is moving westward & will be near or over Hawaii - possibly as a tropical storm - by the middle of the week. A tropical storm WATCH is in effect for many of the islands. "Paul" follows over the Eastern Pacific but is not expected to threaten any land areas.
Olivia: