Hurricane Harbor

A writer and a tropical muse. A funky Lubavitcher who enjoys watching the weather, hurricanes, listening to music while enjoying life with a sense of humor and trying to make sense of it all!

Saturday, May 26, 2018

UPDATED!! Alberto Reforming .. NNE @ 13 MPH... New Center, Similar Track, Florida Under the Gun from Alberto's Weather. Mobile Bay to Panama City Who Get's Landfall. The Problem with Not Photogenic Subtropical Cyclones. Will Alberto Transform to Tropical?









Alberto. 
Still 40 MPH.
Moving NNE at 13 MPH.



Forecast Discussion.
Forecaster Beven explains NNE ....


sat_wv_east_loop-12.gif (640×512)

Alberto has the typical atypical Subtropical Storm signature of asymmetrical signature. The reason Alberto looks like this is it is dealing with shear and dry air coming in from the West as expected blowing the his massive amount of convection off to the East over Florida. He also reformed over night over one of his other centers we spoke about and though not totally reformed he is moving North towards a targeted spot somewhere between the North Central Gulf Coast and the Florida Panhandle. The reason it's hard to pinpoint the spot totally is that the reformation of the center throws off previous model plots and now rather than going North off the Yucatan there was a shift to the right that for now pulls the track to the right a drop. However, the hook to the left before landfall is still supposed to occur. You can see the closed center of Alberto on the Earthnull site however it's hard to see on visible imagery. The appearance has gotten a bit better throughout the day and perhaps the morning's first good visible image may show the center better. Or Alberto will stay this way for a while as many Gulf of Mexico hybrid sort of storms do that do not conform to the perfect definition of a cyclone but the NHC a while back opened the door to naming and giving advisories to these types of systems and that is where we are today. It's not a bad place to be, it's gives the public the most amount of information in advance about the dangers from an approaching storm with strong wind, waves, rainfall and all the other types of action a storm of this sort brings with it. And, often even the messiest storms like this do find a sweet spot to wrap up close to shore so it's important to pay attention no matter what name is used to describe it or what flag it is flying so to speak. I'm just referring to it now as Alberto.


This is a good graphic from the NHC.
Shows the area where weather could be.
Rains and associated flooding.


Your typical "CONE" 
But the cone follows the center.
Subtropical Storms have weather far from the center.
So it's a good map but a bit useless.
Well unless you are at landfall.
Mobile Bay to Panama City be warned.


My favorite map.
The old "Navy" map.



Note the grid is wider.
Circles show were TS force winds could happen.

I prefer people look at this map as if you are in Tampa or Naples looking at the regular NHC Cone it would give the appearance you don't have much to worry about other than rain. Wrong... strong weather is associated with these storms and this storm in particular has "JUMPED" rather than moved as it relocated under an additional center. It did it once, it could do it again as it struggles to survive it's battle with unrelenting shear and dry air. Models are shown below. Also if you are not now on Twitter but want to dip you toes in the water you may want to check out the Twitter feed Mike provides on www.spaghettimodels.com down towards the bottom left and you may want to rethink whether you want to be on Twitter. There is much useful, timely information there. The Tweet I'm showing is from Cranky who I sometimes refer to in my mind as CW who has an awesome brain and amazing handle on how weather works and does a good job of explaining it on Twitter with both words and maps.




I'm going to update this blog later this evening with the newest information. I'm going to write a post also that mostly shows some Hurricane History with both May/June storms in this region and also the hard to understand and not very photogenic Subtropical Storms that form in the Gulf of Mexico often early in the year or late in the year. Earl from 1998 comes to mind as does Colin just a few years ago.


Colin


Alberto



Besos BobbiStorm
@bobbistorm on Twitter

Ps ... Viewers of my blog from a long time back know that in the past I have ranted and raved about how stupid it was to name some amorphous looking storm a Tropical Storm or Subtropical and also complained when they did not upgrade a great looking Disturbance to a Tropical Storm. I've seen a a "Tropical Disturbance" slam into Hispaniola with flooding rains and it looked way better than Alberto and didn't get a name. The truth is it is what it is and I'm just going with it this time. There is a center there even though it's overall appearance is more disheveled than some guy who had been out all night drinking and took the Uber home not cause he was being "good" but because he couldn't find his car in the bar parking lot. It is what it is. The truth is it is Memorial Day Weekend and some people really can be dumb as $hit and that is sad but true and better they be warned than be taken by surprise because Alberto didn't get his act together until just before landfall. If you look carefully both at the satellite image (that shows a naked swirl) and Earthnull there is something there. It is what it is and I'd rather people be warned. 


My youngest son was at the Air and Sea Show in Miami that went on under gray skies from the wet sand, rain coming and going. It's a big event and today it went on despite the Florida State of Emergencies and Alberto going to rehab promising to reform.  It is what it is.



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