New incest forms near Antilles. Could develop into Isaias (who picks these names?). It's worth watching this week, could bring some swell to Florida....Let the hype begin...
Getting pretty late in the season for anything in this region to make it to the coast with all of the NW winds aloft/cold fronts coming off the east coast.
Thanks for the depressing yet accurate clarification mitch. Btw, can you believe they misspelled incest on that chart?! Pretty unprofessional for a professional institution. Think about that..."invest"...that just sounds dumb!!
bring it on. if it pumps from WAY OUT ..... head to obx..... or search for it on the incoming tide.... (chugga)
TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL 800 AM EDT TUE OCT 28 2014 For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico: 1. A tropical wave interacting with an upper-level trough continues to produce a large area of cloudiness and disorganized thunderstorms from the Lesser Antilles eastward over the Atlantic Ocean for several hundred miles. Since upper-level winds are expected to be marginally conducive, some gradual development of this disturbance is possible while it moves northwestward to west-northwestward at 10 to 15 mph during the next few days. By the weekend, however, conditions are expected to become unfavorable for tropical cyclone formation. Regardless of development, this system will produce brief periods of gusty winds and locally heavy rainfall across portions of the Lesser Antilles through today. * Formation chance through 48 hours...low...20 percent. * Formation chance through 5 days...medium...30 percent. I wonder if this system accounts for the local SI forecast of head high waves early next week...
Idk I saw it jump to head high last night for sunday and got stoked but it's back to flat again this morning..
I think in the mid atlantic, a non-tropical storm is expected to come off the coast and fire up north winds betwen Cape Hatteras and Cape Cod over the weekend and push down some N wind swell, along with really windy local conditions.
Ok ok so the bump is back for sunday but slightly smaller and it's looking good for spots south of Moco through MD and Delaware. So the question is will all the Moco Surfer JOCKS head south....
looks like jersey will get nothing and a few spots down the coast a little will be getting head high.
Northern Jersey will get a bag of ****s, hey for some of you that's your thing! This will be ENE swell and I know of a certain spot on a long buried island that should work for this....OCNJ should be working good as well and anything further south probably not so much...but hey this isn't some over hyped "cane" swell so I'm just expecting some 3 foot peelers...
TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL 200 PM EDT TUE OCT 28 2014 For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico: 1. A tropical wave interacting with an upper-level trough is producing a concentrated area of showers and thunderstorms a couple of hundred miles east-northeast of the northern Leeward Islands. Since upper-level winds are expected to be marginally conducive, some gradual development of this disturbance is possible while it moves west-northwestward to northwestward at 10 to 15 mph during the next few days. By the weekend, however, conditions are expected to become unfavorable for tropical cyclone formation. * Formation chance through 48 hours...medium...30 percent. * Formation chance through 5 days...medium...40 percent. Forecaster Stewart
TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK...CORRECTED NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL 200 PM EDT WED OCT 29 2014 Corrected second sentence For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico: 1. An area of low pressure has formed just north of the Leeward Islands and is producing a large area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms. Although upper-level winds are not particularly conducive, some development of this disturbance is possible during the next day or so while it moves west-northwestward to northwestward at 10 to 15 mph. After that time, conditions are forecast to become unfavorable for tropical cyclone formation while the system turns northward. * Formation chance through 48 hours...medium...30 percent. * Formation chance through 5 days...medium...30 percent. Forecaster Blake/Brown