During Laura last year, I cobbled together a little visual to monitor trends in the storm's track and distinguish steady trends from short-term wobbles.
Well the #wobbleplot is back for #Ida. Satellite fixes suggest the storm remains towards the eastern edge of track guidance.
Checking in on the #WobblePlot roughly an hour later, #Ida is still following the NE side of the ensemble guidance envelope.
I've penciled in the mental adjustment to ensemble guidance I've been making in light of these trends.
The core may get rather close to New Orleans.
12:05 PM 8-28-21 #WobblePlot update shows plenty of wobbling, last hour it was to the west this hour to the north.
But the general trend remains pretty steady. #Ida is still tracking along the eastern edge of forecast model guidance.
#Ida has continued to wander farther right of EPS guidance and other track forecasts.
The system should swing a bit to the left this eve as it gets closer to a ridge over NC, but I think it's time to seriously consider eyewall impacts in #NOLA.
There are a whole lot of houses that shouldn’t exist in Florida (and elsewhere!) and the sad fact is a tremendous number of them are about to be rebuilt on taxpayers’ dime through NFIP.
The storm is really starting to feel the squeeze between new cells encroaching from the south and the broader line of storms approaching from the west.
It's still dangerous and in a dangerous environment, but I think its time of unrivaled dominance is running out.
Indeed, the latest scan shows higher CC values (though still enough of a drop to be considered a TDS IMO), a weaker/broader couplet, and a lack of a clearly-defined reflectivity hook.
It's still dangerous, but it's no longer in tip top shape.
The storm has been tornado-warned for approximately 5 hours (first mention by me:
Still nothing standing in the way of this supercell producing a strong to violent tornado for the forseeable future, though low-level instability starts waning a bit as you approach the I-69 corridor.
Either way, if you're in the storm's path (even if not warned yet), be ready.
SPC is clearly on the same page with a new MD saying that this storm could remain at or near this intensity (producing a strong to violent tornado) for *at least* another HOUR #KYwx
I’m never going to be perfect but I try very hard to respond to and improve from criticism.
Neither outlet I mentioned in my earlier tweet has ever made even cursory gestures in that direction, hence the rather harsh approach in dealing with them.
I definitely don’t want my initial tweet to be interpreted as “HS kids in their parents basement are the problem” as someone who has done (and is still doing! And will still be doing until May!) a lot of tweeting without the requisite degrees.
As we're in peak Hurricane Season and the tropical Atlantic remains active, here's a quick reminder to make sure you're tuned into reliable sources (first and foremost @NHC_Atlantic) and tuned out of the cacophony of misinformation.
Here's some BS I've been asked about today:
@NHC_Atlantic Both of these outlets are well-known purveyors of misinformation about tropical cyclones. If you're following them, I suggest the unfollow button.
If friends/family ask you about their posts, I'd make the same suggestion.
@NHC_Atlantic Remember:
-ONLY the NHC makes determinations about what category a storm is, and anyone claiming to do so is leading you astray.
-NO long range (7-10day+) deterministic model forecast is worth posting or getting concerned about.