A ‘traumatized’ Gulf Coast, Florida, Southeast must watch possible storm threat
I hope wherever this update finds you, you are safe and your recovery process is getting started following Helene, a storm that stands with any of the worst hurricane disasters in U.S. history.
The scope of the destruction, particularly in two places dear to my heart, the Big Bend and western North Carolina, is immense and difficult to comprehend, even as my home of Tallahassee has — again — escaped the very worst of a major hurricane by a hair’s breadth.
At some point, I’m going to write something to try to put Helene into its proper meteorological and historical context. To be honest, I simply can’t do it right now. I need time and space.
However, I do want to weigh in briefly on something more pressing after hearing from so many of you by email: the potential for another round of tropical development in the Caribbean and Gulf in the next week.
I’ve been monitoring this possibility for a few days but haven’t said anything, simply because I didn’t want to unnecessarily alarm the already traumatized with something that had a low probability of happening.
Unfortunately, that potential is sufficiently realistic at this point that it’s something you should be aware of along the U.S. Gulf Coast.
Still so many questions about new possible Gulf Coast storm threat
The 8 a.m. Sunday Tropical Weather Outlook from the NHC has a 50% chance of development between Tuesday and next weekend. This risk is not associated with Hurricane Isaac or Tropical Storm Joyce, which have developed in the last few days but are not threats to land.
This National Hurricane Center graphic maps the storms and disturbances in the tropics on Sunday, Sept. 29, 2024.
The culprit is once again the dreaded Central American Gyre (CAG), which is in the process of redeveloping now after Helene mostly rolled up the original CAG circulation on its way north. (This is why the hurricane was so absurdly large.)
Once the CAG re-establishes itself in the next few days, convection originating near Panama may be flung north around the broader circulation into the northwestern Caribbean. By the middle or end of next week, this system too may take advantage of a still-favorable upper-level environment and organize into a tropical storm. The models that did better in predicting the development of Helene via a similar mechanism are more bullish on this possibility.
At this range and without an actual disturbance to watch, I’d simply say that it’s perhaps a little more likely than not something eventually develops in the Caribbean in the next 4 to 8 days, though not a certainty. That is of course concerning, as a steering ridge over the western Atlantic would again mean anything that does develop is probably heading northwest into the Gulf by the end of next week.
Steering favors eastern Gulf track with likelihood of shear
Longer range, the forecast is highly uncertain, as it always is for disturbances that haven’t developed yet. In about a week, most of the reliable global ensemble models show a deep and powerful dip in the jet stream diving into the east-central United States.
This would tend to favor anything that forms eventually angling northeast or east-northeast over the eastern Gulf, more sharply than Helene’s north-northeast heading.
On the positive side, that pattern is also one in which we might expect more shear over the northern or eastern Gulf Coast if anything were to approach. Additionally, it doesn’t seem like this potential system would roll up the entire CAG, meaning it would be notably smaller than Helene.
Any storm would likely be smaller, but that’s cold comfort right now
Of course, given what we’ve just been through, any size or strength of storm is too large and too strong. As always, don’t put any weight on individual model runs at this range. There is too much uncertainty in where and when an organized center of circulation might form. Just watch and wait.
In summary, a second potential threat to the Gulf Coast is unfortunately plausible in the upcoming week. However, this risk is at the monitoring and possible level right now, not the preparing or likely level.
Any potential impacts to the U.S. Gulf Coast are around a week or more away. However, you might wait to put your patio furniture back out and pause the deployment of your 15’ lawn skeletons, werewolves, and Cthuls-hu until the forecast gets a little clearer.
I’ll be keeping a careful eye on the situation in the days ahead. Keep watching the skies.
Ryan Truchelut, WeatherTiger
Dr. Ryan Truchelut is chief meteorologist at WeatherTiger, a Tallahassee company providing forensic meteorology expert witness services, and agricultural and hurricane forecasting subscriptions. Visit weathertiger.com for more information or email Truchelut at [email protected].
This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Hurricane forecast: Florida, Gulf Coast must watch brewing storm
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