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#1
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WOCN31 CWHX 251800
Information statement issued by the canadian hurricane centre Of Environment Canada at 3.00 PM ADT Thursday 25 September 2008. This is the only planned statement at this time. A complex weather pattern developing in the southwestern Atlantic Is poised to set up heavy rain and strong winds for portions of The Maritimes and southeastern Québec over the weekend. A frontal low pressure system southeast of the Carolinas and a tropical disturbance northeast of the dominican republic both have the potential to develop into tropical storms over the next day or so. The us national hurricane center has been closely monitoring Both of these systems for any tropical development but as of early Thursday afternoon neither had developed into a tropical storm. Regardless of the exact tropical nature of these systems most computer models for the last fews days have indicated that one Of these lows will push heavy rain into southeastern Canada on the Weekend ... With 50-100 mm being a reasonable expectation. There is also the potential for strong winds with this system as it arrives. Since neither low has been declared to be tropical we will not Issue dedicated bulletins at this time. However the Atlantic storm prediction centre issued special weather statements last night For all three maritime provinces announcing the increasing Certainty that heavy rain is to be expected. It is still premature for specifics to be given so the public in southeastern Canada is advised to monitor forecasts by this centre and the regional storm prediction centres for updates on this weather situation. / So it's TS Kyle now AND a nor'easter double whammy. Maybe triple, we shall see. Coffee in the Maritimes |
#2
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On Sep 25, 10:26*pm, Coffee in Madrid wrote:
WOCN31 CWHX 251800 Information statement issued by the canadian hurricane centre Of Environment Canada at 3.00 PM ADT Thursday 25 September 2008. This is the only planned statement at this time. A complex weather pattern developing in the southwestern Atlantic Is poised to set up heavy rain and strong winds for portions of The Maritimes and southeastern Québec over the weekend. A frontal low pressure system southeast of the Carolinas and a tropical disturbance northeast of the dominican republic both have the potential to develop into tropical storms over the next day or so. The us national hurricane center has been closely monitoring Both of these systems for any tropical development but as of early Thursday afternoon neither had developed into a tropical storm. Regardless of the exact tropical nature of these systems most computer models for the last fews days have indicated that one Of these lows will push heavy rain into southeastern Canada on the Weekend ... With 50-100 mm being a reasonable expectation. There is also the potential for strong winds with this system as it arrives. Since neither low has been declared to be tropical we will not Issue dedicated bulletins at this time. However the Atlantic storm prediction centre issued special weather statements last night For all three maritime provinces announcing the increasing Certainty that heavy rain is to be expected. It is still premature for specifics to be given so the public in southeastern Canada is advised to monitor forecasts by this centre and the regional storm prediction centres for updates on this weather situation. / So it's TS Kyle now AND a nor'easter double whammy. Maybe triple, we shall see. I've been watching the MetO's Sea level charts for the N Atlantic and it seems that those Lows leaving the US from the Carolinas are feeding up into the Denmark Strait along the Mid Atlantic Ridge instead of crossing the ridge to Europe. A time lapsed sequences shows them almost circulating about one another. Either that or feeding each other. They seem to make a quantum jump around the same time as a suitable magnitude quake presents itself. (Difficult to say due to the time lag before the data is presented online.) For example a 975 mb S of Greenland on the noon chart of the 24th becomes a 988 after slipping off a piece to the north as a 1009 mb. Meanwhile another Low has joined the fray some 20 degrees to the south, exactly where the other was when that one started. That's on the midnight chart 12 hours later. 5.4 M. 24th @ 17:12. -22.7. -12.8. S Mid Atlantic Ridge. Pity I never grabbed the 18:00. |
#3
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In article
, Weatherlawyer wrote: On Sep 25, 10:26*pm, Coffee in Madrid wrote: WOCN31 CWHX 251800 Information statement issued by the canadian hurricane centre Of Environment Canada at 3.00 PM ADT Thursday 25 September 2008. This is the only planned statement at this time. A complex weather pattern developing in the southwestern Atlantic Is poised to set up heavy rain and strong winds for portions of The Maritimes and southeastern Québec over the weekend. A frontal low pressure system southeast of the Carolinas and a tropical disturbance northeast of the dominican republic both have the potential to develop into tropical storms over the next day or so. The us national hurricane center has been closely monitoring Both of these systems for any tropical development but as of early Thursday afternoon neither had developed into a tropical storm. Regardless of the exact tropical nature of these systems most computer models for the last fews days have indicated that one Of these lows will push heavy rain into southeastern Canada on the Weekend ... With 50-100 mm being a reasonable expectation. There is also the potential for strong winds with this system as it arrives. Since neither low has been declared to be tropical we will not Issue dedicated bulletins at this time. However the Atlantic storm prediction centre issued special weather statements last night For all three maritime provinces announcing the increasing Certainty that heavy rain is to be expected. It is still premature for specifics to be given so the public in southeastern Canada is advised to monitor forecasts by this centre and the regional storm prediction centres for updates on this weather situation. / So it's TS Kyle now AND a nor'easter double whammy. Maybe triple, we shall see. I've been watching the MetO's Sea level charts for the N Atlantic and it seems that those Lows leaving the US from the Carolinas are feeding up into the Denmark Strait along the Mid Atlantic Ridge instead of crossing the ridge to Europe. A time lapsed sequences shows them almost circulating about one another. Either that or feeding each other. They seem to make a quantum jump around the same time as a suitable magnitude quake presents itself. (Difficult to say due to the time lag before the data is presented online.) For example a 975 mb S of Greenland on the noon chart of the 24th becomes a 988 after slipping off a piece to the north as a 1009 mb. Meanwhile another Low has joined the fray some 20 degrees to the south, exactly where the other was when that one started. That's on the midnight chart 12 hours later. 5.4 M. 24th @ 17:12. -22.7. -12.8. S Mid Atlantic Ridge. Pity I never grabbed the 18:00. Flare-up of convection over Kyle's center just before the sun went down on visual satellites. Funny how far to the left the first storm took over the states. Also funny how they nudged the forecast track a tad to the right now - closer to where I am. Funny... those high pressure cells. Some models still suggest a Cat 1 storm before landfall. We shall see. |
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