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Tropical Storm Alberto--Mexico Landfall at 50mph/993mb


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We have our first cherry of the 2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season due to a growing signal for tropical genesis in the Bay of Campeche/western Gulf. 

This soon to be invest comes from a monsoon gyre/CAG that has been in place over the Caribbean for a while now. With a large area of vorticity/disturbed weather over Central America/Yucatan, a broad low is expected to develop and move toward the coast. It's still unclear how far north the actual center goes, or how quickly something spins up, but the setup for heavy rain over Texas and much of the Gulf Coast is pronounced. As you can see below, life-threatening flash flooding is possible/occurring in Mexico (let's not forget about friends like @wxmx) and Central America.

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As for wind, the threat seems relatively low as rain is likely to be the predominant and most widespread impact, but we'll of course have to watch for how any broad low tightens up. 

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For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico:


1. A large area of disturbed weather is located over Central America, 
the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, and the adjacent waters of the 
northwestern Caribbean Sea. A broad area of low pressure is 
forecast to form from this system over the southwestern Gulf of 
Mexico on Monday or Tuesday.  Environmental conditions appear 
conducive for subsequent gradual development of the low, and a 
tropical depression or tropical storm could form by midweek while 
it moves slowly westward or west-northwestward.

Regardless of development, several days of heavy rainfall are 
expected across portions of southern Mexico and Central America, and 
these rains are likely to cause life-threatening flooding and flash 
flooding.  Locally heavy rainfall is also expected to spread over 
portions of the northwestern coast of the Gulf of Mexico by the 
middle of the week.  In addition, gale warnings have been issued 
for portions of the Gulf of Mexico, and more information on these 
is available in High Seas Forecasts issued by the National Weather 
Service.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...low...30 percent.
* Formation chance through 7 days...high...70 percent.
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Just noticed a 90E on the Pacific side of the CAG.  I can't see two systems developing that close to each other.  90E has broad turning already.  Given the head start, I'd give it the nod.  https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/sat/satlooper.php?region=90E&product=vis

 

EDIT TO ADD: Looking at low level vort, 90E might be what actually develops in the BoC.

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I’m actually seeing more chances of the eastern lobe in the Carribean developing, swinging wnw around the top portion of the gyre, and then moving Slowly north into south Texas.  The western lobe of the gyre has land interaction issues and will likely get pulled south very slowly while the eastern lobe rotates around.  

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0Z UKMET: a little further north than the 12Z run; still has a TS

NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 54 HOURS
FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 54 : 23.6N 94.4W

LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND
VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS)
-------------- ---- -------- ------------- -------------
1200UTC 19.06.2024 60 23.5N 94.7W 998 35
0000UTC 20.06.2024 72 23.4N 95.6W 997 39
1200UTC 20.06.2024 84 24.9N 97.9W 999 38
0000UTC 21.06.2024 96 CEASED TRACKING

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Looks broad on models but chances still increasing for a TC:

Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
800 AM EDT Mon Jun 17 2024

For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico:

Southwestern Gulf of Mexico:
Satellite imagery and surface observations indicate that a broad 
area of low pressure is forming over the Bay of Campeche. 
Environmental conditions appear conducive for additional gradual 
development, and a tropical depression or tropical storm is likely 
to form by midweek while it moves slowly westward or 
west-northwestward toward the western Gulf coast. 

Regardless of development, several days of heavy rainfall are 
expected across portions of southern Mexico and Central America, and 
these rains are likely to cause life-threatening flooding and flash 
flooding.  Locally heavy rainfall is also expected to spread over 
portions of the northwestern coast of the Gulf of Mexico by the 
middle of the week.  In addition, gale warnings have been issued for 
portions of the Gulf of Mexico, and more information on those 
warnings is available in High Seas Forecasts issued by the National 
Weather Service.  Interests along the western and northwestern Gulf 
coasts should monitor the progress of this system. An Air Force 
Reserve Hurricane Hunter aircraft is scheduled to investigate the 
system later today.
* Formation chance through 48 hours...high...70 percent.
* Formation chance through 7 days...high...70 percent.


*This is now Invest 91L.

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The best lower level rotation on radar is still over land.  There does seem to be some rotation N of that over water, GFS suggests multiple centers. The overwater circulation has deeper convection and some lightning.  The recon would have left half an hour ago per the POD, but I don't see any data.  Suspect it has been cancelled.  Tomorrow morning's recon might find something.

 

The flooding may be between CRP and HOU if GFS is any guide.  STX needs the rain, 2 and 3 out of 4 drought.  They may not want 4 or 8 inches of rain in 2 days, but they need the rain.  The reservoirs on the border are quite low.  Amistad is 25%, Falcon is at an all time low 10%.  Nuestra Señora del Refugio parish church in the not-so-drowned ghost town of Viejo Guerrero, Tamps., MX

7921.jpg

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39 minutes ago, Ed, snow and hurricane fan said:

The best lower level rotation on radar is still over land.  There does seem to be some rotation N of that over water, GFS suggests multiple centers. The overwater circulation has deeper convection and some lightning.  The recon would have left half an hour ago per the POD, but I don't see any data.  Suspect it has been cancelled.  Tomorrow morning's recon might find something.

 

The flooding may be between CRP and HOU if GFS is any guide.  STX needs the rain, 2 and 3 out of 4 drought.  They may not want 4 or 8 inches of rain in 2 days, but they need the rain.  The reservoirs on the border are quite low.  Amistad is 25%, Falcon is at an all time low 10%.  Nuestra Señora del Refugio parish church in the not-so-drowned ghost town of Viejo Guerrero, Tamps., MX

7921.jpg

 

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3 minutes ago, Ed, snow and hurricane fan said:

PTC 1 later this afternoon, if I had to guess  I'd think they might want (with cooperation of SMN) TS watches for near Tampico to near the US border.  Or they may decide watches for what will be a 40 kt. TS can wait another 12 hours.  Edit to Add: NHC in the outlook is hinting at a PTC

Was just about to post. This is a good use of the PTC designation.

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12Z UKMET: still has a TS

 NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER  30 HOURS
              FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 30 : 22.8N  91.4W

                        LEAD                 CENTRAL     MAXIMUM WIND
      VERIFYING TIME    TIME   POSITION   PRESSURE (MB)  SPEED (KNOTS)
      --------------    ----   --------   -------------  -------------
    0000UTC 19.06.2024   36  23.6N  92.6W      997            36
    1200UTC 19.06.2024   48  23.6N  95.0W      997            36
    0000UTC 20.06.2024   60  23.3N  95.2W      995            40
    1200UTC 20.06.2024   72  25.1N  98.9W      998            39
    0000UTC 21.06.2024   84              CEASED TRACKING
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BULLETIN
Potential Tropical Cyclone One Advisory Number   1...Corrected
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       AL012024
400 PM CDT Mon Jun 17 2024

...LOW PRESSURE AREA OVER THE BAY OF CAMPECHE EXPECTED TO BRING
HEAVY RAINFALL THREAT TO PARTS OF THE WESTERN GULF COAST...
...TROPICAL STORM WATCH ISSUED FOR PARTS OF THE COAST OF TEXAS AND
NORTHEASTERN MEXICO...


SUMMARY OF 400 PM CDT...2100 UTC...INFORMATION
----------------------------------------------
LOCATION...20.3N 93.2W
ABOUT 380 MI...615 KM SE OF LA PESCA MEXICO
ABOUT 470 MI...755 KM SE OF BROWNSVILLE TEXAS
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...40 MPH...65 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT...NNW OR 345 DEGREES AT 7 MPH...11 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...1001 MB...29.56 INCHES


WATCHES AND WARNINGS
--------------------
CHANGES WITH THIS ADVISORY:

A Tropical Storm Watch has been issued for the Texas coast from
Port O'Connor southward to the mouth of the Rio Grande.

The government of Mexico has issued a Tropical Storm Watch for the
northeastern coast of Mexico south of the mouth of the Rio Grande
to Boca de Catan.
—————-
Potential Tropical Cyclone One Discussion Number   1
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL       AL012024
400 PM CDT Mon Jun 17 2024

Satellite, surface, and aircraft data show that the center of 
the large low pressure area is over the Bay of Campeche with a 
central pressure near 1001 mb.  The system currently does not have 
the structure of a tropical cyclone, as the associated convection 
is poorly organized and the maximum winds are located about 
200-250 n mi northeast of the center.  The various global models 
forecast this band of stronger winds to start moving onto the 
western Gulf coast on Wednesday, and a Tropical Storm Watch is 
required at this time.  Thus, advisories are being initiated on 
Potential Tropical Cyclone One.

The initial motion is 345/6.  This general motion should continue 
for the next 24 h or so, although there could be some erratic 
motion due to center reformation.  After that, the cyclone is 
expected to turn west-northwestward and westward on the south side 
of a mid- to upper-level ridge over the northern Gulf coast.  This 
should steer the system into northeastern Mexico between 48-72 h.  
While there are differences in details due to the disorganized 
nature of the system, the track guidance is in good agreement on 
this general scenario.

The global models suggest that some deepening of the central 
pressure could occur, although none of them currently forecast the 
system to tighten up into a classic tropical cyclone.  Based on 
that, the intensity forecast calls for only modest strengthening.  
There is a chance than a small-scale vorticity center inside the 
large cyclonic envelope may develop enough convection to form a 
tighter wind core as suggested by the GFS, and based on this 
possibility the forecast has the system becoming a tropical storm in 
about 36 h.  However, there is a chance the system will never 
become a tropical cyclone.
issued. 


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT  17/2100Z 20.3N  93.2W   35 KT  40 MPH...POTENTIAL TROP CYCLONE
 12H  18/0600Z 21.1N  93.4W   35 KT  40 MPH...POTENTIAL TROP CYCLONE
 24H  18/1800Z 22.2N  93.8W   35 KT  40 MPH...POTENTIAL TROP CYCLONE
 36H  19/0600Z 22.9N  95.0W   35 KT  40 MPH...TROPICAL CYCLONE
 48H  19/1800Z 23.4N  96.4W   40 KT  45 MPH...TROPICAL CYCLONE
 60H  20/0600Z 23.8N  97.7W   40 KT  45 MPH...TROPICAL CYCLONE
 72H  20/1800Z 24.0N  98.9W   30 KT  35 MPH...INLAND
 96H  21/1800Z 24.0N 101.4W   20 KT  25 MPH...INLAND
120H  22/1800Z...DISSIPATED

$$
Forecaster Beven

 

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5 minutes ago, wxmx said:

Certainly looks like a multi-year drought buster, from famine to feast, weather here knows no middle ground

 

Screenshot 2024-06-17 at 4.09.03 p.m..png

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Falcon Lake is at 10%.  100 mm/4 inches is a good thing except for the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental.  Good to see you back.

 

Unless this system organinzes and gets N of Corpus Christi, it won't have a concave coast aiding convergence, or the 40 knot forecasts are probably close.  The lower pressure in the entire BoC is robbing gradient.  I can see a 990mb 35 knot storm.  KCRP is 1007 mb, that is pretty low to be that far from a tropical system.  The low inland near Cd del Carmen is fading, I can see the rough outlines of where the low is forming now over water.  I think it will be strong enough to avoid satellite cyclones as mentioned in the disco re: GFS.

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8 hours ago, GaWx said:

12Z UKMET: still has a TS

 NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER  30 HOURS
              FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 30 : 22.8N  91.4W

                        LEAD                 CENTRAL     MAXIMUM WIND
      VERIFYING TIME    TIME   POSITION   PRESSURE (MB)  SPEED (KNOTS)
      --------------    ----   --------   -------------  -------------
    0000UTC 19.06.2024   36  23.6N  92.6W      997            36
    1200UTC 19.06.2024   48  23.6N  95.0W      997            36
    0000UTC 20.06.2024   60  23.3N  95.2W      995            40
    1200UTC 20.06.2024   72  25.1N  98.9W      998            39
    0000UTC 21.06.2024   84              CEASED TRACKING

0Z UKMET: a little further S/still TS

NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER  36 HOURS
              FORECAST POSITION AT T+ 36 : 22.5N  94.0W

                        LEAD                 CENTRAL     MAXIMUM WIND
      VERIFYING TIME    TIME   POSITION   PRESSURE (MB)  SPEED (KNOTS)
      --------------    ----   --------   -------------  -------------
    1200UTC 19.06.2024   36  22.5N  94.0W      999            31
    0000UTC 20.06.2024   48  22.1N  95.5W      998            35
    1200UTC 20.06.2024   60  23.0N  98.4W     1000            38
    0000UTC 21.06.2024   72              CEASED TRACKING
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The sprawling nature of the cylcone will definitely hinder the development of something significant, but the fact that the eastern energy is taking control (you can see the smaller vorticity center west, near the Tamaulipas coast, caught in "orbit" of the stronger vorticity near the Yucatan) allows for much better mid/upper atmospheric conditions and more time over water to organize. It just needs more consistent convection near the eastern center to get a name. Also, the further east initial position will allow for more ridging to build in the SE US. I think this can get to a 45-55 kts TS, with a trending to faster organization/tightening just prior to landfall near Tampico (maybe a hair south of what the NHC is currently forecasting)

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It is pretty concerning to see this low shear environment over the GOM this early in the season. Not that this system will take advantage bc of its sprawling nature but that could be a bad sign down the road. Usually these early season GOM storms are quite sheared for all or most of their lifespans, this storm has a beautiful upper level anticyclone spanning the entire gulf 

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Interestingly fwiw, the new UKMET (12Z) has no TC from this per their textual output for the first time in at least 5 runs. Not saying it will necessarily be right though. I suspect it’s going to be a borderline call either way.

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Recon validated NHC- no closed center yet. Also finding winds to minimal TS force well north of the “center” though we already had plenty of buoy and rig confirmation of those wind speeds. This will certainly bc a close call as to whether it becomes a TC or not 

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Wind gusts not quite to gale force just ahead of the showers.  Breezy outside of but near showers.  RAP 925 mb winds about 25 knots locally.  Euro has 30 to 40 knot 925 mb winds later tonight.  Much lower 20 to 25 knots between CRP and BRO.  Not an organized system.  Euro is 2.7" PW, below the all rime record, for 12Z CRP.  2.87 is CRP does a special 18Z sounding. 2.77 for tomorrow's 0Z sounding.  2.92 tomorrow (Wednesday evening) at 0Z around CRP, but just below 2.8 at the actual site.  Future Alberto may be a slop system, but a KCRP all time PW record makes the storm memorable.  SPC has immediate coast (slightly larger area tomorrow) in a >2% tornado marginal.

 

Small areas of TS winds right near the coast before and after landfall on HAFS, picking a few random locations in Tamps,, SBCAPE near 500 J/Kg and good speed shear just inland.  Tornado risk will exist anywhere near the landfall.

 

EDIT TO ADD: New advisory on PTC1 extends the TS watch to San Luis Pass.  Toll bridge off Galveston island (sometimes on busy weekends 288 is the way to come back), the water moving through that ~1/2 mile pass is moving fast, sometimes with white water.  FM 3005 looks like it will flood past the seawall, ditto the same highway except Brazoria CR 257.  The late Popo's party pad is near FM 3005, it doesn't take much to get water over the road.  Thankfully, the Mexican Fan Palm is salt tolerant.  When downtown/Broadawy flooded in 2008, most of the decades old majestic trees didn't survive.  But the palms did.  Anyway, only 2 to 4 feet of rise is expected, but HGX says that will close the roads on the barrier islands and the Bolivar Peninsula.  Popo's daughter and her husband have the pad, they don't have as many parties as Popo did before his health started to decline.

day2probotlk_1730_torn.gif

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This is a closed circulation now, symmetrical, better organized, but it needs more convection near the center. Pretty big circulation, covers the whole GOM west of 88W

 

 

G16_sector_gm_GEOCOLOR_20fr_20240618-1919.gif

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1 hour ago, wxmx said:

This is a closed circulation now, symmetrical, better organized, but it needs more convection near the center. Pretty big circulation, covers the whole GOM west of 88W

 

 

G16_sector_gm_GEOCOLOR_20fr_20240618-1919.gif

Hey wxmx, stay safe down there in Monterrey.

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4 minutes ago, Jebman said:

Hey wxmx, stay safe down there in Monterrey.

Thanks Jeb. It definitely sinks in when your city is specifically mentioned in a Discussion Advisory.

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Lots of vorticity off the nw Yucatán right now.  It’s pretty far south though so I’m not sure it swings far enough north to get to the US.  Lots of heavy rain north of the center though with the individual lobes roaring around the dominant southern one. 

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On 6/18/2024 at 12:38 PM, NorthHillsWx said:

It is pretty concerning to see this low shear environment over the GOM this early in the season. Not that this system will take advantage bc of its sprawling nature but that could be a bad sign down the road. Usually these early season GOM storms are quite sheared for all or most of their lifespans, this storm has a beautiful upper level anticyclone spanning the entire gulf [emphasis mine]

I do not know anything about hurricanes really. But it is both fascinating and scary to me that so many signs of an unusual season are present this year. Now here is another unusual element to add to the list of exceptional things going on.

For years I used to live across from World Trade Center in downtown Jersey City. During Sandy we had water coming from two directions: from the Hudson River to our east and New York Harbor to our south. After that I have always wanted the ocean to stay in the ocean where it belongs.

I miss the NYC area but boy oh boy am I glad I no longer live where I used to there. I'd worry all this summer about what might happen.

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4 hours ago, wxmx said:

This is a closed circulation now, symmetrical, better organized, but it needs more convection near the center. Pretty big circulation, covers the whole GOM west of 88W

 

 

 

That has got to be the broadest circulation I have ever seen in my lifetime.  Looks like there may be just a bit of southerly shear just to the west of the center.  This has a limited chance to develop into anything much larger than a 45-mph tropical storm.  However, weather affects will be far removed from the center especially on the north and northwest side. 

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