On Jun 4, 5:02*pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
http://my.opera.com/Weatherlawyer/bl...-9-m?cid=90493....
The reasoning from my point of view, is that these things are erratic
because of the unknown unknowns. There are known knowns; these are
used to program weather model runs.
There are things we know we know such as thickness. I am going to
resist a parallel allusion here.
From the blog: Originally posted by Weatherlawyer:
How do I tell them about the major resurgence in the Pacific?
No..
Wait...
Or is it tornadoes?
***
Tropical Storm Twenty in the S. Indian Ocean. (I did say it was a
complex set up.)
The season in the southern Indian Ocean starts in June or July IIRC,
so it must be coming to an end. Only it never ends there, not like the
North Atlantic which has a quite sharply defined start and end.
Thing get hectic from now until it runs off the map.
Looking at yesterday's BOM Antarctica at T +72 it quite clearly shows
a definition at 160 East that, if you follow it carefully runs across
the continent to 20 East (Australia to Africa.)
I was looking at the way the line bent instead following the isobars.
Well, we live and learn.
Some of us live.
And some of us live and ledarn.
Quite a lot of people get killed in the process.