On Wednesday, 18 June 2014 10:41:43 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Looks like things are getting hot under the Great Lakes:
http://parsonsweather.com/wxtropical.php
That will resonate with the North Atlantic chart to a certain degree.
On Thursday, 19 June 2014 17:26:30 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Thursday, 19 June 2014 16:34:05 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
2014/06/19 @ 10:17
13.5 S. 166.83 E. 6.4 M. Vanuatu Islands
A spell changer if not a series breaker.
And a change of focii?
http://www.volcanodiscovery.com/suwa...-activity.html
That should curtail events he
http://www.spc.noaa.gov/climo/reports/140619_rpts.html
A large system developing at 60 E. expands on Saturday until it touches Antarctica and condenses into a tropical storm by Sunday night:
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View
Two systems at 130 and 50 west, develop over more or less the same time -as is the custom with these things. By Monday a full blown set of tropical storms will be running but weaken rapidly.
They don't behave just like that though. I have the opinion they will come back again. Bigger, stronger, faster.
That's not on the charts yet but we'll see.