Flhurricane.com: "Chances are now up to 90%, so it is likely a depression or storm will form later today from 97L. This system already has a developed appearance and conditions ahead of it are favorable for more development. Those in the central and southern lesser Antilles will likely feel impacts of this tomorrow into Thursday." Beyond that, those in the southern Caribbean Islands, and Jamaica will want to watch it closely, too soon to tell beyond that, but it's worth keeping tabs on in the Bahamas, Hispaniola, Cuba and the Southeastern United States..
I don't want to steal Betty's thunder but 97L is now TS Matthew. It's not time to order Chinese food yet but keep an eye on it. Like all other tropical systems this year there is a lot of uncertainty about this one. It is a large storm. 000 WTNT44 KNHC 281502 TCDAT4 TROPICAL STORM MATTHEW DISCUSSION NUMBER 1 NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL AL142016 1100 AM AST WED SEP 28 2016 Surface observations and data from an Air Force Reserve reconnaissance aircraft indicate that the tropical wave passing through the Windward Islands has acquired a closed circulation. The aircraft found peak flight-level winds of 64 kt, and SFMR surface winds of around 50 kt over the northern portion of the circulation. As a result, advisories are being initiated on a 50-kt tropical storm. The current lack of inner core structure suggests that further strengthening should be limited today, but environmental conditions consisting of warm water and low shear ahead of Matthew favor intensification throughout the remainder of the forecast period. The NHC intensity forecast is more conservative than the statistical guidance, but follows the trends of the global models in deepening the system. Since the center has very recently formed, the initial motion estimate is a highly uncertain 275/18 kt. A strong deep-layer ridge over the western Atlantic should steer Matthew westward across the eastern Caribbean during the next few days, and the track guidance is tightly clustered through 72 hours. After that time, the tropical cyclone will be approaching the western portion of the ridge and a northwestward turn is expected, although there are significant differences among the track models as to when the turn takes place and how sharp it will be. The GFS takes the cyclone northwestward much faster than the ECMWF with more troughing developing over the eastern Gulf of Mexico. For now, the NHC track lies near a consensus of the faster GFS and slower ECMWF. FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS INIT 28/1500Z 13.4N 60.7W 50 KT 60 MPH 12H 29/0000Z 13.6N 63.2W 50 KT 60 MPH 24H 29/1200Z 13.9N 66.4W 55 KT 65 MPH 36H 30/0000Z 13.9N 69.0W 60 KT 70 MPH 48H 30/1200Z 13.8N 71.2W 65 KT 75 MPH 72H 01/1200Z 13.5N 74.2W 70 KT 80 MPH 96H 02/1200Z 14.8N 75.6W 80 KT 90 MPH 120H 03/1200Z 17.5N 76.5W 90 KT 105 MPH $$ Forecaster Brown .
looking good lady and gentlemen! PS hey austin, text products in the hurricane portion of the website are still broken!!!!
check out FNMOC Oct 5th & 6th https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/wxmap_cg...antic&prod=sgwvht&dtg=2016092812&set=SeaState Crazy days ahead
Uh...it's still early, but if I Lived in Miami, I would be locating my hurricane shutters now and buying water. SI shows HH to OH Wednesday morning, semi clean so far in central Florida, so I guess there are thoughts that it's coming up the coast...so far...the guys are talking about it missing Florida, but they're also saying that the path is very uncertain, and wait until the weekend, some models have it hitting NC, some Cuba, some Jamaica, some Bahama's. Too soon to know just yet. Thanks for posting the NHC map. Just got home from work --
Yea, models this evening (0z Thursday run) are still in pretty good consensus that Matthew makes a hard right turn, and stays east of Florida.
Its just one model run (tonight's GFS) but man...could be an interesting next week for the east coast: