Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Atlantic hurricane outlook for the remainder of June
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 02:32 PM GMT am 12. Juni 2009 +1
The last half of June is usually one of the quietest portions of hurricane season. In the 14 years since the current active hurricane period began in 1995, only four tropical storms formed in the last half of June. Thus, recent history gives us a 29% chance of a last-half-of-June named storm. None of those four storms since 1995 became a hurricane, and hurricanes are quite rare in June.

Sea Surface Temperatures
Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) have remained close to average over the tropical Atlantic between Africa and Central America this month (Figure 1). These are the are the coolest SST anomalies we've seen since 1994. The strength of the Azores-Bermuda high has been near average over the past two weeks, driving near-average trade winds. Stronger-than-average trade winds were observed through most of the period November 2008 - May 2009, which helped cool the tropical Atlantic substantially. Strong winds mix up colder water from the depths and cause greater evaporative cooling. The latest 2-week run of the GFS model predicts continued average trade winds over the tropical Atlantic for the remainder of June, so expect the near-average SSTs to continue over the tropical Atlantic as we head into July.

Typically, June tropical storms form over the Gulf of Mexico, Western Caribbean, and Gulf Stream waters just offshore Florida, where water temperatures are warmest. SSTs are 26 - 28°C in these regions, which is about 0.5°C above average for this time of year. June storms typically form when a cold front moves off the U.S. coast and stalls out, with the old frontal boundary serving as a focal point for development of a tropical disturbance. African tropical waves, which serve as the instigators of about 85% of all major hurricanes, are usually too far south in June to trigger tropical storm formation. SSTs are too cold in June to allow storms to develop between the coast of Africa and the Lesser Antilles Islands--there has only been once such development in the historical record--Ana of 1979, which coincidentally will be the name given to this year's first storm.


Figure 1. Sea Surface Temperature (SST) departure from average for June 11, 2009. SSTs were near average over the tropical Atlantic. Note the large region of above average SSTs along the Equatorial Pacific off the coast of South America, signaling the possible start of an El Niño episode. Image credit: NOAA/NESDIS

El Niño
NOAA's Climate Prediction Center issued an El Niño Watch last week, saying "that conditions are favorable for a transition from neutral to El Niño conditions during June - August 2009". The pattern of changes in surface winds, upper-level winds, sea surface temperatures, and deeper water heat content are all consistent with what has been observed during previous developing El Niños. We are currently experiencing neutral conditions, with ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Eastern Pacific just 0.2°C below the threshold for El Niño. In the week since the El Niño watch was issued, ocean temperatures have remained nearly steady in the Eastern Pacific, so we are not rushing into an El Niño just yet. As I discussed in detail in an earlier post, most of our more advanced El Niño computer models are predicting a weak El Niño event for the coming Atlantic hurricane season. If this indeed occurs, it is likely that Atlantic hurricane activity will be suppressed due to the strong upper-level winds an El Niño usually brings to the tropical Atlantic, creating high wind shear that tears hurricanes apart.

Wind shear
Wind shear is usually defined as the difference in wind between 200 mb (roughly 40,000 foot altitude) and 850 mb (roughly 5,000 foot altitude). In most circumstances, wind shear above 20 knots will act to inhibit tropical storm formation. Wind shear below 12 knots is very conducive for tropical storm formation. High wind shear acts to tear a storm apart. The jet stream's band of strong high-altitude winds is the main source of wind shear in June over the Atlantic hurricane breeding grounds, since the jet is very active and located quite far south this time of year.

The jet stream over the past few weeks has been locked into a pattern where a southern branch (the subtropical jet stream) brings high wind shear over the Caribbean, and a northern branch (the polar jet stream) brings high wind shear offshore of New England. This often leaves a "hole" of low shear between the two branches off the coast of North Carolina, which is where Tropical Depression One formed at the end of May.

The jet stream is forecast (Figure 2) to maintain this two-branch pattern over the coming two weeks. This means that the waters offshore of the Carolinas are the most likely place for a tropical storm to form during this period.


Figure 2. Wind shear in m/s between 200 mb and 850 mb, as forecast by the 00Z June 12, 2009 run of the GFS model. The position of the subtropical jet stream is forecast to change little over the next two weeks, and this jet will bring high wind shear to the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico for most of the remainder of June. There will at times be a region of low shear between the polar jet (northern set of arrows on the plots) and the subtropical jet, allowing for possible tropical development off the coast of North Carolina. Wind speeds are given in m/s; multiply by two to get a rough conversion to knots. Thus, the red regions of low shear range from 0 - 16 knots.

Steering currents
The steering current pattern over the past few weeks has not changed much, and is typical for June. We have an active jet stream bringing many troughs of low pressure off the East Coast of the U.S. These troughs are frequent enough and strong enough to recurve any tropical storms or hurricanes that might penetrate north of the Caribbean Sea. Steering current patterns are predictable only about 3 - 5 days in the future, although we can make very general forecasts about the pattern as much as two weeks in advance. At present, it appears that the coming two weeks will maintain the typical June pattern, bringing many troughs of low pressure off the East Coast capable of recurving any June storms that might form. There is no telling what might happen during the peak months of August, September, and October--we might be in for a repeat of the favorable 2006 steering current pattern that recurved every storm out to sea--or the unfavorable 2008 pattern, that steered Ike and Gustav into the Gulf of Mexico.

Summary
Recent history suggests a 29% chance of a named storm occurring in the second half of June. Given that the current SST pattern and two-week wind shear forecast look fairly typical for June, I'll go with a 20% chance of a named storm forming during the last half of June. There's currently nothing out there of note, but we should start watching the region off the North Carolina coast 4 - 7 days from now.

Other stuff
Saturday, June 13 marks the last day of the Vortex2 tornado research project. The team of University of Michigan students writing our Vortex2 blog has posted some great photos and accounts of the storms they caught up to this week.

The Portlight.org charity is hard at work helping victims of the Volusia County, Florida floods.

Today's post will likely be my final "live" post until June 29, as I am headed to London, England, and Kefalonia Island, Greece for my first-ever European vacation. My fellow wunderground meteorologists will be posting to my blog if any tropical weather of note develops. I also recommend following the blog of wunderblogger Weather456, who works as a forecaster on St. Kitts Island in the Lesser Antilles. If the tropics remain quiet, I've prepared some "canned" blogs that will be posted on my blog. The topics include:

--The Atlantic Meridional Mode: implications for the 2009 hurricane season
--African dust forecast for the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season
--U.S. vulnerability to sea level rise: the Coastal Vulnerability Index (CVI)
--The six Hurricane and Typhoon Hunter flights that never came back
--Sea level rise: the forecast
--Sea level rise in the Northeast U.S. from ocean current changes

Jeff Masters
Categories: Hurricane
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701. StormSurgeon 02:15 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting Cotillion:


Whereabouts? And oh yes, Germans do indeed make great beer.

Last time I stayed for 2 weeks a few years ago.. ending up in the local paper and fell down an escalator in Hanover, screwing up my knee. Good times.


Miesau Army Depot, 4th Ordance Company, very near Ramstein Air Force Base in southwestern Germany. Watch out for those German escalators.
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702. IKE 02:17 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Yeah, it's definitely locked into summer in the SE USA and along the gulf coast.

High pressure heat dome is locked in. 50-60 knots of shear being blown in the western GOM from an impressive high pressure.

Sorry fellow wish-casters...no Ana on the horizon.
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703. StormSurgeon 02:20 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting IKE:
Yeah, it's definitely locked into summer in the SE USA and along the gulf coast.

High pressure heat dome is locked in. 50-60 knots of shear being blown in the western GOM from an impressive high pressure.

Sorry fellow wish-casters...no Ana on the horizon.


.........lov'n it!
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704. Gumbogator 02:20 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
SSts are above normal in the GOM. Plenty of latent heat to build on for later in the season. 83-88 degree waters. Looks more like July. High pressure is stationary in NE Gulf. Air temps are 94-100 inland.
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705. Cotillion 02:20 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting StormSurgeon:


Miesau Army Depot, 4th Ordance Company, very near Ramstein Air Force Base in southwestern Germany. Watch out for those German escalators.


Ah, near Kaiserslautern. Nice. I'm back up near Bremen.

Where next week, also supposedly hitting 30C/85F sort of range. Lovely.
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706. futuremet 02:22 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting IKE:
Yeah, it's definitely locked into summer in the SE USA and along the gulf coast.

High pressure heat dome is locked in. 50-60 knots of shear being blown in the western GOM from an impressive high pressure.

Sorry fellow wish-casters...no Ana on the horizon.


You are too hard on them Ike lol
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707. Cavin Rawlins 02:24 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
A strong tropical wave normally has a surface relfection clearly evident. This one is no exception. Just a wave though.

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708. JRRP 02:26 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
where is pottery?
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709. futuremet 02:27 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
As I thought, this year would surpass 2008's SSTs eventually.



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710. Seastep 02:29 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Good morning.

Looks like pottery's getting his rain.

kman and stormpetrol too.
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711. futuremet 02:30 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
2008 still had much greater TCHP



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712. Cotillion 02:30 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting futuremet:
As I thought, this year would surpass 2008's SSTs eventually.





2008 still looks warmer... as it's the top graph. 2009, or the bottom graph, as a way to catch up yet over both total heat content and area covered.
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713. IKE 02:31 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting futuremet:


You are too hard on them Ike lol


Okay...I see no Ana on the horizon...I could be wrong though...stay tuned!
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714. Orcasystems 02:31 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Blog Update
Reflector site for those at work, which now also includes Weather456, daily updates


AOI #1

AOI #2

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715. chevycanes 02:32 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
2008 had higher SST in the main development region.

2009 doesn't surpass anything at this time.
Quoting futuremet:
As I thought, this year would surpass 2008's SSTs.



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716. atmoaggie 02:32 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting pottery:
Yesterday I was forced to lodge a Formal Complaint, and threaten to subtract Brownie points from a bunch of you guys, if I did not get some sky-borne water.
Well it worked ! Nothing like a little ass-kicking around here, to get the job done.
IT IS RAINING !!
Thank you all. Have a wet Saturday.


Ooh, ooh, my turn. We really need some of that sky-borne water.
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717. Orcasystems 02:33 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting Weather456:
A strong tropical wave normally has a surface relfection clearly evident. This one is no exception. Just a wave though.



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718. futuremet 02:34 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Guys, I meant that it might surpass it. I said eventually...
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719. SSideBrac 02:35 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting kmanislander:
Rain on tap for us today



Even looks as though the Sister Islands will get some of that good wet stuff
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720. Patrap 02:36 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
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721. chevycanes 02:37 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting futuremet:
Guys, I meant that it might surpass it. I said eventually...

how do you come up with that by looking at those maps? nothing suggests that the waters are gonna warm at a rate greater than in 2008.

in fact, most data available suggests otherwise.
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722. weathermanwannabe 02:38 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
This will end up being an interesting season; with so many "late" trofs into the Summer, I have to wonder if Mother Naure will adjust at the back end of the season with "later" trofs than normal come the Fall....I can deal with the heat in North Florida if I know that high pressure protective bubble will be around during the peak of the season deflecting storms away from the Gulf coast as opposed to getting whittled away at in September from trof activity....Only time will tell..
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723. futuremet 02:39 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting chevycanes:

how do you come up with that by looking at those maps? nothing suggests that the waters are gonna warm at a rate greater than in 2008.

in fact, most data available suggests otherwise.


I've been looking at these maps since the beginning of the year chevycanes. Look at the archives and you will notice.
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724. Cotillion 02:39 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Even if they do get warmer than 2008 - and from those maps, it's a bit of sweeping statement - it won't make such difference if shear remains high because of El Nino, or whatever.

Storm can't dip its toes in the bath water if its getting its head cut off...
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725. Patrap 02:43 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Welcome to the LSU Earth Scan Lab.

The ESL is a satellite data receiving station and image processing facility for environmental data from six unique earth observing sensor systems. ESL specialize in real-time access to satellite imagery and measurements of the atmosphere, oceans and coastal areas within the Gulf of Mexico / Caribbean Sea region, data which we obtain directly from satellite transmissions to three antennas on LSU rooftops. These data sets have many applications for research, education, and state emergency response.


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726. futuremet 02:43 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
12Z NAM thinks that that the surge of moisture from the perennial low will generate TC development.
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727. presslord 02:55 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    


Ben Franklin is said to have drawn this...he got it pretty close...
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728. atmoaggie 02:57 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
This time of year, I really like this ESL sst graphic, I just wish they maintained it so that I could look at previous years.



24 - 30 C. Any blue at all, not at all favorable. Any red, quite favorable. Simplicity rules.
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729. sporteguy03 02:58 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting IKE:


Okay...I see no Ana on the horizon...I could be wrong though...stay tuned!


Ike thank you for the dry update lol :)
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730. SavannahStorm 03:02 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting Weather456:
A strong tropical wave normally has a surface relfection clearly evident. This one is no exception. Just a wave though.



She's below 10N, too.
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732. presslord 03:04 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
please note, btw, that he differentiated between North and South Carolina....
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733. SavannahStorm 03:05 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting presslord:
please note, btw, that he differentiated between North and South Carolina....


lol
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734. Tazmanian 03:06 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
go take a vacation guys there is not march going on out there see you guys back here in AUG you guys this go out and injoy the days the blog wil all ways be here



evere one most take the weekend off from bloging to in joy the nic weather
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735. Cavin Rawlins 03:06 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


She's below 10N, too.


Center of the axis along 10N.
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736. K8eCane 03:06 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Storm can't dip its toes in the bath water if its getting its head cut off...

Cotillion
best comment i have heard LOL
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737. Patrap 03:07 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Hurricane Research,ESL

The real-time access to satellite measurements has enhanced LSU faculty research on hurricane processes, prediction, and coastal impacts. In particular, recent research has focused on estimating the radius of maximum winds using satellite measurements from the eye (1), which can be used to predict wind, waves (2),(3) and storm surge (4). Research has included investigations of the effects of dry masses on track and intensity changes (5),(6), and on the effects of cool water upwelling and oceanic heat content on intensity changes along track (7), (8), (9). A recent study of oceanic and mid- to upper-level winds during Ivan, Katrina, and Rita demonstrated that Katrina's and Rita's rapid intensification's over Loop Current waters in the Gulf was made possible by favorable upper level easterly winds (8), (13). Details of Ivans' impact on coastal/shelf/slope circulation and on beach morphology changes were assessed(3). Using higher resolution images from Radarat-1 SAR and SPOT we have also developed techniques for detecting and quantifying hurricane-related coastal and urban flooding from Lili and Katrina (10).

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738. K8eCane 03:08 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting presslord:
please note, btw, that he differentiated between North and South Carolina....


Press
a little birdie told me that last year you gave us permission to use "the carols". Was the little bird correct?
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739. stormwatcherCI 03:08 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


She's below 10N, too.
So was Ivan
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740. presslord 03:09 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
yea...I gave dispensation to "Carols"
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741. Patrap 03:10 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Earth Scan Laboratory GOES Night Time SST/SSH Composite Imagery and Animations

Project Director: Nan Walker

GOES night time composite imagery and animation sequences are viewable in three areas

* Gulf of Mexico
* Central Gulf of Mexico
* And, a large area encompassing the coastal region of Central America, the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and the Eastern Atlantic

The thermal composites are built using the "warmest pixel" approach from a sequence of night time imagery (obtained every 30 minutes) spanning about 10 hours. The pixel size is ~ 4km in size. The GOES-8 and 12 SSTs were computed with GVAR channel 2. The SST algorithms have been developed in the ESL with RMS errors < 0.5 C. (see Walker et. al. 2003) The Sea Surface Height (SSH) data were provided by Dr. Bob Leben, University of Colarado. The project is funded by the Minerals Management Service.
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742. IKE 03:10 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting sporteguy03:


Ike thank you for the dry update lol :)


Certainly.

Here's that tropical weather outlook for the planet.....

Y
A
W
N........

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743. SavannahStorm 03:11 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    


You can really see the wave start to coalesce in the last few frames before the satellite coverage hole obscures most of it.
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744. K8eCane 03:12 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
.LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/...
AS OF 3 AM SATURDAY...COLD FRONT FINALLY GETS A SOLID PUSH TO THE
SOUTH BY TUESDAY. GFS IS ADVERTISING A SFC LOW DEVELOPING OFF THE
COAST TUESDAY BUT THE UPPER FORCING FOR IT SEEMS TO BE FEEDBACK.
HOWEVER THE ECMWF ALSO SHOWS A SIMILAR...ALBEIT MUCH WEAKER
FEATURE. BASED ON THAT THE BEST CHANCES FOR RAIN IN THE EXTENDED
APPEAR TO BE MON NIGHT INTO TUE.

HIGH PRESSURE WILL RIDGE INTO THE CAROLINAS FROM THE NE ON
WEDNESDAY...WITH TEMPS AND DEWPOINTS BOTH BEING KNOCKED NEATLY
BELOW CLIMO. MOISTURE RETURN BEGINS GRADUALLY THU/FRI...WITH TEMPS
HEADING BACK ABOVE CLIMO AS WELL. FOR NOW WILL LIMIT POPS TO THE
SILENT 20 RANGE THAT


well maybe the tropics are not COMPLETELY dead...this from NWS wilmington nc
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745. SavannahStorm 03:14 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting presslord:
yea...I gave dispensation to "Carols"


Is "Cackalacky" acceptable? As in, "It's Sunday and I want to buy beer, let's drive over the river to South Cackalacky."
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746. atmoaggie 03:15 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
The thermal composites are built using the "warmest pixel" approach

That is done to hopefully remove the effects of any undetected, thin clouds.
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747. Patrap 03:15 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
NOAA Southern Regional Climate Center

* Tropical Home
* Archived Storms
* Dr. Gray's Forecast
* Saffir Simpson Scale
* Tracking Chart
* Other Links

o National Hurricane Center
o LSU Hurricane Center
o Buoy Data
o Earth Scan Laboratory
o Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
o National Weather Service
o CSU Tropical Meteorology Project
o Hurricane Hunters Home Page
o Weather Underground Tropical Page

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748. stormwatcherCI 03:17 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting SSideBrac:


Even looks as though the Sister Islands will get some of that good wet stuff
Looks like they got a little already. Around .16 inches this am.
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749. presslord 03:20 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


Is "Cackalacky" acceptable? As in, "It's Sunday and I want to buy beer, let's drive over the river to South Cackalacky."


only in reference to North Cackalacky...
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750. AussieStorm 03:21 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Hi all,
Can someone post the GFS 10m-Wnd 06hr Pcpn in 96hrs and 102hrs. It has low developing off the coast of NC.
Cheers AussieStorm
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751. K8eCane 03:22 PM GMT am 13. Juni 2009    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


Is "Cackalacky" acceptable? As in, "It's Sunday and I want to buy beer, let's drive over the river to South Cackalacky."


thats fine by me savannah
in fact we use the same expression here in se nc....but i'm only 50% of the vote
the other 50 belongs to press
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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