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Blog

Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

Filtering by Category: Medium Range Outlooks

1:30 PM (Tues) | ***Beryl remains a category 5 hurricane at mid-day...reaches Jamaica on Wednesday...Yucatan Peninsula on Friday...late weekend turn to the northwest likely...possibly to SE Texas***

Paul Dorian

Hurricane Beryl remains classified as a category 5 storm and is moving at a pretty good clip (22 mph) across the Caribbean Sea. Hurricane Beryl will move very close to or right over the island of Jamaica on Wednesday and then likely reach the Yucatan Peninsula region of Mexico by the end of the week. After that, the likely scenario has a weakened Beryl moving over the southwestern Gulf of Mexico and it very well can take a turn to the northwest late in the weekend meaning a landfall in southeastern Texas is on the table.

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1:30 PM | ***Hurricane Beryl likely to attain “cat 5” status over the Caribbean Sea...a late turn to the NW?...an active Atlantic Basin...a quiet Pacific***

Paul Dorian

Hurricane Beryl is now moving across the southern Windward Islands and into the Caribbean Sea as a category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 140 mph. This system has a chance to intensify into category 5 status (sustained winds of 157 mph or higher) in the next day or two as it treks to the west-northwest over the warm waters of the Caribbean Sea. On this current track, Hurricane Beryl will move close to the island of Jamaica by mid-week and then likely reach the Yucatan Peninsula region of Mexico by the end of the week. After that, the likely scenario has a weakened Beryl moving west towards eastern Mexico; however, a turn towards the northwest and southeastern Texas cannot be ruled out later this weekend.

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12:45 PM (Thursday) | ***A tropical system in the Atlantic Basin that is likely to become quite an important player in about 7-10 days***

Paul Dorian

There are currently two tropical systems in the Atlantic Basin with one located over the western Caribbean Sea and the other positioned in the eastern tropical Atlantic. While the frontrunner tropical system may indeed generate lots of rainfall for the Yucatan Peninsula and then eastern Mexico, it is the trailing system that may ultimately become more of a concern. The tropical system still well out in the Atlantic has a good chance for intensification in coming days and it very well could become quite an important player on the tropical scene in about 7-10 days or so.

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10:45 AM (Wednesday) | ***Severe thunderstorms on the table in the Mid-Atlantic region from late today into tonight***

Paul Dorian

Several ingredients will come together late today and tonight to raise the chance of severe thunderstorm activity in the Mid-Atlantic region. The combination of an approaching surface cool front, higher heat and humidity, a strong low-level jet, wind shear, and an upper-level trough will result in showers and thunderstorms from later today into tonight and any thunderstorm can reach severe levels. The severe weather threats include damaging wind gusts, heavy rainfall, and large hail. In addition, given the expected formation of strong wind shear, there will also be the potential of isolated tornadoes.

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8:45 AM (Thurs.) | **Higher heat and humidity on the way…an increasing chance of showers and storms…any storm can produce heavy rain, damaging wind gusts**

Paul Dorian

While quite warm this week in places like Washington, D.C. and Philadelphia, the worst of the heat and humidity is still to come. In fact, humidity levels have been rather manageable in these areas during the past few days limiting “heat indices” which are meant to reflect how weather conditions “feel” to humans given the heat and humidity. Large-scale upper-level ridging has been centered overhead during the past few days allowing for a bit of an onshore flow of air in places like D.C., Philly, and southern New Jersey, but that pattern will change in the Friday, Saturday, Sunday time frame resulting in higher heat and humidity. In addition, the chance of showers and storms will increase beginning later tomorrow and the threat of rain will continue this weekend and any storm that forms can produce locally heavy rainfall and damaging wind gusts.

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Friday AM - **Possible strong-to-severe storms later today/early tonight…a comfortable weekend...hot stretch of weather begins early next week and it could last awhile**

Paul Dorian

Washington, D.C. reached the 90 degree mark on Thursday for only the first time this month, but that is about to change in a big way as an extended hot spell is coming to the Mid-Atlantic region. The hot stretch begins early next week, but before we get there we’ll have to deal with possible strong-to-severe thunderstorms later today and early tonight and these will be followed by a comfortable Father’s Day weekend with lower humidity.

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*2024 Tropical Season and Summertime Outlook by Arcfield Weather*

Paul Dorian

Numerous signs point to an active tropical season this year in the Atlantic Basin with more tropical storms, hurricanes, and “major” hurricanes compared to the long-term averages. The average number of named tropical storms in an Atlantic Basin tropical season is 14.4 with 7.2 of those reaching (minimal) hurricane status, and 3.2 becoming “major” (1991-2020 baseline period). 

Based on my overall analysis of current and forecasted atmospheric and oceanic conditions, I expect around 16 named storms this season with around 9 reaching hurricane status and of those perhaps as many as 4 to achieve “major” classification level. Another metric to use in the assessment of overall tropical activity is known as the accumulated cyclone energy or ACE which utilizes both strength and longevity of tropical storms in its calculation and I expect this to be 150-160% of normal in the Atlantic Basin this tropical season.

The two most important parameters that have been factored into the “2024 Tropical Outlook” include: (1) the development of La Nina in the equatorial part of the Pacific Ocean and (2) warmer-than-normal sea surface temperatures in much of the breeding grounds region of the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea…both of which are favorable for the development and intensification of tropical activity. I believe the most vulnerable areas to be directly impacted this upcoming tropical season include those in and around the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and Southeast US.

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1:00 PM (Thursday) | *Severe weather/tornado threat next few days to be focused on the Plains*

Paul Dorian

A spurt of tornadoes since late April has put levels well above normal as we reach the end of May and the overall active weather pattern of recent weeks looks like it’ll continue into the month of June. One of the key ingredients to this on-going active weather pattern has been the steady influx of colder-than-normal air masses from Canada into the US at the same time increasingly warm and humid air has been flowing northward from the Gulf of Mexico. The main area of concern for severe weather and tornadoes over the next few days will be across the Plains states all the way from Texas (today/tonight/tomorrow) to the Dakotas/Minnesota (on Sunday).

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10:30 AM | **Much warmer weather pattern begins early next week across the eastern half of the nation coinciding pretty closely with the transition from April to May**

Paul Dorian

There have been occasional cold air outbreaks from Canada into the Northeast US and Mid-Atlantic region during the month of April and this week will be no exception. In fact, low temperatures this morning were in the 30’s across many suburban locations along the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor with scattered frost in some areas. Another chilly air mass will push into the northeastern states at mid-week following the passage of a strong cold front and early Thursday morning is likely to feature more low temperatures in the 30’s with patchy frost again on the table.

Next week, however, will feature a big-time warmup across the eastern half of the nation coinciding pretty well with the transition from April into May. Temperatures can climb well up into the 70’s by Sunday afternoon in places like DC, Philly, and New York City and 80+ degrees is possible for highs on Monday and the upcoming pattern change will result in far less frequent outbreaks of chilly air from Canada into the US.

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Tuesday 02 April 2024 - **A strong and dynamic spring storm system impacts a large part of the nation next few days...severe weather in its warm sector…significant accumulating snow up north**

Paul Dorian

A double-barreled storm system will impact a large part of the nation from today through Thursday with an initial (primary) low located over the Upper Midwest and a secondary is to form later tomorrow near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. The initial system is producing severe weather today across the Ohio Valley and there are waves of heavy rain running all along the “I-80” states from Illinois-to-Pennsylvania with “flash flood watches and warnings” issued in most areas. The severe weather threat will shift to the east on Wednesday raising the chances for strong-to-severe thunderstorm activity in the southern Mid-Atlantic and eastern Carolinas.

Farther north, it is cold enough for accumulating snow today across portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin and some spots will get dumped on over the next 24 hours. The accumulating snow threat will shift a bit to the east to Michigan by later tonight and perhaps to the south on Wednesday into Iowa and Illinois. Once the secondary storm gets going near the east coast later tomorrow, the accumulating snow threat will shift from the Upper Midwest to the interior Northeast US and some spots in interior New York State and New England will get dumped on by the time Thursday evening rolls around.

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