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!
Monday, May 27, 2019
HEAT RECORDS BROKEN IN SOUTH... cool in the West... Tornadoes Still Happening. EF3 El Reno Killed 2 People. Memorial Day Weekend 2019
Tropics Memorial Day Weekend 2019
Days before the start of the Hurricane Season.
The NHC "nothing happening pale baby blue" is there
There's also a mess of convection in the SW Caribbean.
Central America Gyre aka CAG
Could something develop down there?
Possibly, not probably but a possibility.
I tweeted this last night.
Shear would have to relax.
Shear is forecast to relax.
MJO? Yeah maybe...who knows.
Keep watching.
And we have all been watching tornadoes lately.
First comes tornado season.
Then comes hurricane season.
Just to be clear before going on with some hot weather and tropical weather history the El Reno Tornado was a EF3. This rating was expected from the damage however until it's official we wait and see what the experts find. The experts found a small but devastating path of destruction for a short lived but strong tornado that killed two people and destroyed parts of El Reno; a town very familiar with destructive May tornadoes. In this case the fast developing, fast moving tornado hit an area with a motel that was adjacent to a trailer park and a car dealership which obviously made the situation worse wherever those cars landed. The article below is a good article to read on the tornado especially for anyone who has been obsessed with them since the first time they watched either The Wizard of Oz or Twister.
Another thing I want to point out is how pathetic it is sometimes to have expectations of a season or a day in history to judge that season or outbreak by be it Hurricanes or Tornadoes. Last weekend The Weather Channel was on air nonstop with headlines implying 60 million people were in the path of expected long track, destructive wedge tornadoes across a wide swath of the country. And, that was true for last weekend as much as it was forecast for most of the week after that. We are still "there" so to speak the violent weather on the Plains is not yet in the rear view mirror and more severe weather is still expected. This is the season they did not get last year when tornadoes took a Northern holiday and went elsewhere to places such as Wyoming and Cape Cod.
What we need to stop doing is thinking that a weak hurricane season because of an El Nino may keep us safer as history has not shown that to be the case and even worse the seasons when we begin to leave El Nino in the rear view mirror often tend to be the most memorable ones. Hurricane Andrew that was the first named storm to form in the middle of August is a prime example of why we should not judge a hurricane season by how busy it is and in the same way we should not judge possible tornado outbreaks by the size and duration of a large wedge tornado. Obviously the damage done to Moore Oklahoma by large, long duration wedge tornadoes over history makes us look towards them as the bar to judge a tornado outbreak.... however.... if you live in El Reno or any other town hit this week by tornadoes you don't think this outbreak was a "bust" because the previous Saturday was relatively quiet. The word relative is always important when reviewing weather history and various events. And this storm season out on the Plains is not over so everyone put those relative expectations where they belong and take it hour by hour, day by day.
Note the frequency here of 1926, 1953 and 2012.
1989 shows up too often as well.
But going to ignore that one for now.
I don't like to cry shark in a room full of Carolinians.
Let's move on to what I feel is the most important story possibly of this week and that is the record heat in the Southeast. Again, using that word relative it's worth remembering I live in the Carolinas and it relates to me. If I lived on the West Coast I'd be begging for some warm weather and wondering when this cool, wet weather trend is going to end. It's a regional phenomenon caused by atmospheric features far away that are in a stuck pattern that at some point down the road will become unstuck .... trust me on this.
A list of some of the records yesterday reads as follows.
Atlanta 100 degrees. Record broken was set in 1898, 1953, 1962
Augusta 100 degrees. Record broken was set in 1926.
Charleston, SC hit 100 degrees yesterday. 1953, 1989 were both in play record wise.
Fayettevillle NC hit 100 degrees. Record broken was 1926.
Florence SC hit 102 degrees. Record set was 1926.
Muscle Shoals of Jimmy Buffet fame hit 97 degrees. Record broken was 2012.
Charleston thought they peaked....
...but they were wrong.
What is unnerving to me and a few others is the constant references to certain year's records that were broken over the last several days and that is because those years were years when there was a huge High in the Atlantic and are infamous for hurricane landfalls along the East Coast and the Gulf of Mexico. Again for newbies hurricanes often trace the high in the Atlantic and they ride in under the high and then try and turn North wherever the High ends... add to that if or when there are any fronts on the map that may try and pull them North faster at the end of the High that is .... where landfall happens.
Again everything is relative so when I see the years 1926 and 1953 I think of Florida and East Coast hurricanes. I'm sure when I say 1989 my friend in Mt. Pleasant immediate thinks "oh crap... and remembers Hugo" so this is all relative and yes Sandy hit the New York area in 2012. Some records had previously been from 1979 and any South Floridian will scream DAVID while those along coast of the Gulf of Mexico will scream FREDERIC!
Monday records broken went back to 1916.
That year has shown up frequently this May.
Must have been a hot May.
And I'm guessing a very strong High pressure system.
1916 was a busy season with 5 major hurricanes.
The year 1916 sporadically comes up in broken heat records.
I felt it was a good year to review.
As it's not usually mentioned.
And that was BEFORE satellite imagery.
A close up look at the Gulf Coast Storm
That's a July Hurricane by the way.
Sadly too often heat waves are broken by tropical events.
Then in August there was the Texas Hurricane.
It formed as a wave traveling beneath a huge High.
Into the Caribbean ... Gulf of Mexico and hit Texas.
The year 1916 comes up frequently but most people do not remember it because well to be honest other than settlements in Tampa, a very young Miami and Key West not many in Southern Florida lived there or wrote much about that year and it landed in Texas relatively lucky for Floridians. But it was one of those years where a hurricane rode into the Gulf of Mexico around a huge High and made landfall far in Texas to be remembered as one of the Great Hurricanes of that region. Obviously in a time before satellite imagery it's hard to say where that wave first formed but it either developed out of some sort of Central America Gyre or a westbound tropical wave from Africa or a wave collided with the CAG. Camille formed in this region in 1969 but we know it was an Africa wave that didn't develop until it hit those friendly, welcoming waters. Often a high to the North and low shear there will get a storm going fast over very warm Caribbean waters. The 1916 Hurricane has it's own link....
Summer Time Heat Ridge. Distant Tropical Wave E ATL. Home Grown Trouble Down the Road in GOM CLOSE IN or E of FL?
3 Amigos over the USA
Look for storms to pop later today.
Nice wave off of Africa.
Really short post today. I suggest you read yesterday's blog as the thoughts expressed there are still valid. Today the name of the game over much of the USA is the HEAT GAME. Hot weather aka Summer in all it's glory. I'm going to personally try and embrace SUMMER for now and waiting for the tropics to bubble more.
Heat Ridges can be kind of boring, exhausting and they suck all the air out of everything. They also provide awesome summer storms that pop up late in the day filling out skies with clouds climbing up high, turning dark and then letting go with bursts of rain, wind and often downed trees. They come out of nowhere like an old friend knocking at the door or the sounds of a fire truck racing down the street. Enjoy em. Live in AC or go to the beach or go out for ice cream in the evening when the sun goes down. That's my best advice. If you hate the hot weather, leave town (you'll need to travel far) or use the AC and save money elsewhere. Drink water.
As for the tropics I suggest you turn your head far to the East to some incredible waves fighting their way West trying to stay together despite cool water and Saharan Dust. This last week in June feels more like late July weather wise and some of the waves are coming off way higher than they should for June. Impressive waves. Worth watching. You got nothing else to do if you like tropical weather. There is a possibility that the GOM will become active VERY close in somewhere between Nola and Houston. And, off the East Coast of Florida is the area that was spit out over the Outer Banks but did not form and did not travel up to the NE and lingering around blocked by the huge High to it's North it's wandering around close to shore drifting South. Also worth watching.
As for me going out today to get some exercise before the heat heats up and I hibernate the rest of the day before thinking on going out this evening. Awesome sunset last night in Raleigh. You don't get them often here like this and trust me it got way better but I wasn't in the right place to get a good shot. But beautiful all the same against the Carolina Pines.
I'll be back when there is something specific to say. Have a great day!
Besos BobbiStorm
@bobbistorm on Twitter
https://www.facebook.com/bobbi.storm.5
Ps. Maybe I'll have some Tequilla with lunch?
Long Island Iced Tea?
Hmmnnn time will tell.
Location: Miami, Raleigh, Crown Heights, Florida, United States
Weather Historian. Studied meteorology and geography at FIU. Been quoted in Wall Street Journal, Washington Post & everywhere else... Lecturer, stormchaser, writer, dancer. If it's tropical it's topical ... covering the weather & musing on life. Follow me on Twitter @ https://twitter.com/#!/BobbiStorm