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Two waves chanes East Atlantic/99L (80%) and another in the Caribbean 90L (40%) both should be watched.
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Moving Into the Peak Season

Posted: 07:28 AM 03 August 2017 | 1 Comment | Add Comment | Newest: 08:29 AM 03-Aug EDT

August beings the ramp up in earnest into the peak of the Atlantic Hurricane Season toward the climatological peak, which is the second half of August and most of September. This is the time of year where we watch all areas in the tropics and the most surprises tend to happen. It's also the time when conditions tend to be the best for development, and this year is no exception to that.

In the far east Atlantic, a wave has emerged from Africa in a very good position to develop, and because of this the National Hurricane Center requested an investigation area be put on it almost immediately. This system, tagged as 99L now has a 50% chance for development and multiple model support for it, so it's likely by the weekend we'll have a depression or named storm to track across the Atlantic. This does not guarantee a system will make it across, but history tells us that everything this time of year should be monitored closely.

If it were to develop and maintain itself it would likely be closest to the Caribbean in the middle of next week, and closer to the US late next week. See the forecast lounge for long range discussion and speculation on the system. There are factors that could keep it weak and hamper development, so out this far its impossible to say where or how strong it could be.

There may be other areas to track next week as well, watch for a potential area near the Yucatan / Bay of Campeche.

99L (East Atlantic Wave) Event Related Links


Animated Skeetobite Model Plot of 99L


stormplotthumb_7.gif

SFWMD Model Plot (Animated Model Plot) SFWMD Hurricane Page
Clark Evans Track Model Plot of 99L (Animated!) Model Plots in Google Earth - In Google Maps
Clark Evans Intensity Model Plot of 99L (Animated!)

Clark Evans Track Plot of 99L

Other Model Charts from Clark

Clark Evans Top 10 Analog Storms for 99L
More model runs on from RAL/Jonathan Vigh's page
NRL Info on 99L -- RAMMB Info

Floater Satellite Images: Visible (Loop), IR (Loop), WV (Loop), Dvorak (Loop), AVN (Loop), RGB (Loop), Rainbow (Loop), Funktop (Loop), RB Top Loop)


90L (Caribbean Wave) Event Related Links


Animated Skeetobite Model Plot of 90L


stormplotthumb_8.gif

SFWMD Model Plot (Animated Model Plot) SFWMD Hurricane Page
Clark Evans Track Model Plot of 90L (Animated!) Model Plots in Google Earth - In Google Maps
Clark Evans Intensity Model Plot of 90L (Animated!)

Clark Evans Track Plot of 90L

Other Model Charts from Clark

Clark Evans Top 10 Analog Storms for 90L
More model runs on from RAL/Jonathan Vigh's page
NRL Info on 90L -- RAMMB Info

Floater Satellite Images: Visible (Loop), IR (Loop), WV (Loop), Dvorak (Loop), AVN (Loop), RGB (Loop), Rainbow (Loop), Funktop (Loop), RB Top Loop)


StormCarib Reports from the Caribbean Islands

Caribbean Weather Observations

Barbados Brohav Weather Fax

Caribbean Broadcast Corporation (TV/Radio from Antilles)

San Juan, PR Radar Long Range Radar Loop (Latest Static) Base (Static) 1 HR Rainfall (Static) Storm Total Rainfall (Static)

Various Caribbean Radio Stations

DR1 Dominican Republic Hurricanes


Facebook Update Posted
04:25 am 04-Aug-2017 EDT

Good morning! The disturbance that has a high probability of becoming a tropical depression will definitely bear watching as we move forward; the GFS brings this system all the way across the basin and brings it up into the Bahama in about 8 to 9 days and the Florida coast in 9 to 10 days. I was just wanted to let everybody know we see it but there is absolutely no way we're going to attempt to predict where this system is likely to go for at least another 5 days and we have run to run consistency with this system. A lot of things can change between now and this time next week. Stay tune!

Facebook Update Posted
07:49 pm 03-Aug-2017 EDT

Two waves chanes East Atlantic/99L (80%) and another in the Caribbean 90L (40%) both should be watched.

Facebook Update Posted
02:48 pm 03-Aug-2017 EDT

Two waves in watch, one in the East Atlantic (70%) and another in the Caribbean (20%) both should be watched.

Facebook Update Posted
07:58 am 03-Aug-2017 EDT

Watching a wave in the far east Atlantic (99L) with a 60% chance for development. One to watch for next week.

Facebook Update Posted
07:28 am 03-Aug-2017 EDT

New Article: Moving Into the Peak Season https://t.co/A1iFilgcud

Facebook Update Posted
07:16 am 03-Aug-2017 EDT

Watching a wave in the far east Atlantic (99L) with a 50% chance for development. One to watch for next week.

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