Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Dangerous Tropical Storm Irene headed for the Dominican Republic
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 02:38 PM GMT am 21. August 2011 +48
Tropical Storm Irene roared into life last night, transitioning from a tropical wave to a 50 mph tropical storm in just a few short hours. Irene is getting organized quickly, and has the potential to become a hurricane by Monday morning. All interests in the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Cuba, the Bahamas, and South Florida should prepare for the arrival of this dangerous storm. An Air Force hurricane hunter aircraft in the storm found the strongest winds near 18°N latitude to the north of Irene's center at 8am this morning. After passing through the center, the plane returned to the area of strongest winds two hours later, and found that flight level winds at 5,000 feet had increased by about 5 - 8 mph. However, the pressure in the latest center fix taken at 10am EDT remained the same as two hours previously, 1007 mb, and the plane noted that Irene's center was not circular, signs that the storm still has some work to do before serious intensification can begin. Visible satellite loops and radar out of Martinique show the storm has rapidly organized this morning, with well-developed spiral bands forming and a large area of intense thunderstorms to the north of the center. Irene has shrugged off the dry air that was bothering it yesterday, and wind shear has fallen to the low range, 5 - 10 knots, as analyzed by the University of Wisconsin CIMSS group. Torrential rains and strong gusty winds are affecting the northern Lesser Antilles this morning. A wind gust of 41 mph was recorded at St. Eustatius at 8am local time.


Figure 1. Morning satellite image of Irene.

Track forecast for Irene
The computer models are in agreement that Irene will pass just south of Puerto Rico tonight, then hit the south coast of Hispaniola in the Dominican Republic or Haiti on Monday afternoon. Irene should then emerge into the channel between Haiti and Cuba on Tuesday afternoon, when the storm will have 12 or so hours over water before having to contend with Cuba. A trough of low pressure is expected to move across the Eastern U.S. on Wednesday and Thursday, turning Irene to the northwest and north by Thursday. The timing and strength of this trough varies considerably from model to model, and will be critical in determining where and when Irene will turn to the north. Irene's strength will also matter--a stronger Irene is more likely to turn northward earlier. The most likely path for Irene is a track just east of the Florida Peninsula and into Georgia, South Carolina, or North Carolina by next weekend, but a landfall near Miami then directly up the Florida Peninsula is also a reasonable solution--like Tropical Storm Fay of 2008 did. Fay formed just off the coast of Puerto Rico, and was never quite able to get organized enough to become a hurricane, due to passage over Hispaniola and Cuba. Fay topped out as a strong tropical storm with 70 mph winds, and did over $500 million in damage in the U.S., mostly due to flooding rains in Florida that accumulated to over 25 inches in a few areas. Fay also dumped heavy rains on Hispaniola, triggering flooding that claimed eight lives.


Figure 2. Track of Tropical Storm Fay of 2008.

Intensity forecast for Irene
Irene is embedded in a large envelope of moisture now, and wind shear will remain low, 5 - 10 knots, for the next five days. With water temperatures very warm, 28 - 30°C, these conditions should allow for intensification except when land is interfering. Irene's current appearance on satellite loops gives me the impression of a storm that is not fooling around, and I expect Irene will be a hurricane before hitting Hispaniola on Monday. Passage over Hispaniola will not destroy Irene, since it is a fairly large storm. Once the storm finishes with Hispaniola, it will have to deal with Cuba, which will keep Irene from intensifying significantly. Once Irene pops off the coast of Cuba Wednesday or Thursday into the Florida Straits, Irene will likely be a tropical storm. If the storm then has at least a day over water before hitting land, it will likely become a hurricane again, and could become a major hurricane if it ends up missing South Florida and moving over the warm waters on either side of the Florida Peninsula.

Harvey hits Belize
Tropical Storm Harvey made landfall at 2pm EDT on Saturday near Dangriga Town, Belize, as a tropical storm with 60 mph winds. Harvey continues to dump very heavy rains on southern Mexico, but dissipation is expected tonight as the storm pushes inland. Harvey was a small storm, and the strongest winds were confined to a short stretch of coast near where the center came ashore. Winds at Belize City, Belize on Saturday topped out at 15 mph.


Figure 3. Radar image of Harvey taken at 11:30am EDT on Saturday, August 20, 2011, a few hours before landfall in Belize. A small closed eye is visible just south of the offshore islands of Belize. Image credit: Belize National Meteorological Service.

Invest 98L northwest of the Cape Verde Islands
A tropical wave few hundred miles northwest of the Cape Verde Islands off the coast of Africa, Invest 98L, has become disorganized and lost most of its heavy thunderstorms. The disturbance is moving over colder waters and encountering drier air, and NHC is giving 98L only a 10% chance of developing into a tropical depression by Tuesday. The latest set of model runs keep 98L well out to sea away from any land areas over the next five days.

Links
Long-range radar out of Puerto Rico

Jeff Masters
Categories: Hurricane
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1801. dearmas 07:01 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
At this point in time, which way is she moving??
Member Since: August 23, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 115
1802. NCHurricane2009 07:02 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting WCSCTVCharleston:
Dont be surprised if the models shift more towards NC


Do you think the storm track has been due west since St. Kitts?...because if it has been west instead of WNW...maybe the models will drive it through Hispaniola instead of its north coast...keep it weaker...and models will shift their tracks back to the west....
Member Since: September 15, 2009 Posts: 277 Comments: 3357
1803. HoustonTxGal 07:02 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting USAFwxguy:
12 UKMET





The UKMET is usually pretty good at their predictions.. I wonder why they are so much more west with their path? their modle puts it into the GOM.
Member Since: September 18, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 1038
1804. MississippiWx 07:02 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting TropicalAnalystwx13:


I still see it :P


Lol...Well, I don't know what else to show you then. Radar clearly shows that there is no eye as well. Convection doesn't even support an eye wall and you have to have an eye wall to have a true eye. It's not happening yet.
Member Since: Juli 15, 2006 Posts: 13 Comments: 8495
1805. MZT 07:02 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting tea3781:
I think you will continue to see the models sway back and forth. This is one or two model runs that have shifted. The reliable GFDL is still to the west too..
Yeah, this system has not even been named for a whole day yet. The projections get better as the models have some time to digest the path.

I wouldn't be a WU blog post without some people disagreeing on how many degrees north of west a storm is moving. :-} Especially after the eye forms and it wobbles around.
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1806. tennisgirl08 07:02 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting NASA101:
Wondering why the UKMET 12Z and its previous models have such a westerly solution.... it's not a bad model!


That's what I've been saying....in fact the UKMET is the best performing model for long-range forecasts.
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1808. WeatherNerdPR 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
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1809. AstroHurricane001 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Please excuse the European: A cyclonic low, fuelled by warmer-than-normal SSTs in the northeastern Atlantic, approaches the Iberian Peninsula. It will likely track across NW Spain, Bay of Biscay, France, Benelux region, southern Scandinavia and into the Baltics.



Meanwhile, the WU Satellite showed what looked like a transient eye at 6:19 UTC, 2:19 EDT. However, other bloggers are calling into question the existence of that eye.



Irene does, however, look stronger than Fay when she was at this position in 2008. A veritable rainfall threat is present for Hispanola.
Member Since: August 30, 2008 Posts: 8 Comments: 2811
1810. Floodman 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting atmoaggie:
You do remember that I set up a script to set off his house and car alarms, as well as send him a text message, every time that word appears here.

In testing, it was a 3 second delay between "Post Comment" and all of the above.
;-)


LOL...I have always enjoyed your company...one has to enjoy a truly brilliant smarta$$
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1811. Sfloridacat5 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Its a ragged eye trying to form.
You're not going to see a well defined eye wall completely surrounding a center with tropical storm.

Don't expect to see a classis Andrew type eye wall on radar from a tropical storm.
Member Since: September 16, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 2026
1812. ecflweatherfan 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting clwstmchasr:


For 24 hours people keep saying due west and all Irene keeps doing is gaining latitude. I would not call that due west.


Many also do not understand that Irene has been constantly having her center relocated. They finally got a "Good" fix on it this afternoon... now that the MLC and the LLC have stacked up. All one has to do is look at the loops of radar and satellite and see that due west is a valid argument
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1813. FirstCoastMan 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Being here in north florida,the jacksonville area...Do i have anything to worry about?
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1814. SavannahStorm 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting Bluestorm5:
For people in Carolinas, get ready your traffic plans. Not many interstates leaving the coast... we don't want another Floyd interstate mess. I only knows 5 major freeways leaving the coast: US 70, US 17, US 501, I-26, and I-40.





And don't bother coming to Georgia. When Floyd was threatening, it took me 12 hours to drive from Savannah to Athens, GA. That's normally a 3.5 hour drive...
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1815. srada 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting Bluestorm5:
For people in Carolinas, get ready your traffic plans. Not many interstates leaving the coast... we don't want another Floyd interstate mess. I only knows 5 major freeways leaving the coast: US 70, US 17, US 501, I-26, and I-40.





74W-76W to I-74W as well
Member Since: August 17, 2006 Posts: 1 Comments: 772
1816. Dennis8 07:03 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting HoustonTxGal:


The UKMET is usually pretty good at their predictions.. I wonder why they are so much more west with their path? their modle puts it into the GOM.


YES it does....Dr. Masters says to watch that model for long range
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1817. MZT 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
duplicate removed
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1818. Tazmanian 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting violet312s:
I thought that HHers were to do 6 hour fixes if a storm formed. Why didn't they adjust today's flight plans?



they did


000
NOUS42 KNHC 211500
WEATHER RECONNAISSANCE FLIGHTS
CARCAH, NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER, MIAMI, FL.
1100 AM EDT SUN 21 AUGUST 2011
SUBJECT: TROPICAL CYCLONE PLAN OF THE DAY (TCPOD)
VALID 22/1100Z TO 23/1100Z AUGUST 2011
TCPOD NUMBER.....11-082

I. ATLANTIC REQUIREMENTS
1. TROPICAL STORM IRENE
FLIGHT ONE -- TEAL 71 FLIGHT TWO -- TEAL 75
A. 22/12Z,18Z A. 23/00Z
B. AFXXX 0409A IRENE B. AFXXX 0509A IRENE
C. 21/1045Z C. 22/1730Z
D. 18.2N 68.2W F. 24,000 TO 33,000 FT
E. 21/1130Z TO 21/18Z
F. SFC TO 10,000 FT FLIGHT FOUR -- TEAL 72
A. 23/00Z,06Z
FLIGHT THREE -- NOAA 49 B. AFXXX 0709A IRENE
A. 23/00Z C. 22/2315Z
B. NOAA9 0609A IRENE D. 18.2N 70.9W
C. 22/1730Z E. 22/2330Z TO 23/06Z
F. 41,000 45,000 FT F. SFC TO 10,000 FT

FLIGHT FIVE -- NOAA 49
A. 23/12Z
B. NOAA9 0809A IRENE
C. 23/0530Z
D. 41,000 TO 45,000 FT

2. OUTLOOK FOR SUCCEEDING DAY: CONTINUE 6-HRLY FIXES, 2 MORE
G-IV MISSIONS, P-3 MISSIONS EVERY 12 HRS BEGINNING AT 23/20Z.

II. PACIFIC REQUIREMENTS......NEGATIVE/ JWP
Member Since: Mai 21, 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111306
1819. stormwatcherCI 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Link


If you look at the IR shortwave loop Irene looks to be moving west but looks like convection is wrapping around the coc now.
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1820. serialteg 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting weatherjr:
If TS Irene crosses the island of PR (or very near it) then the island will AVOID the strong convective ball to the NE quadrant. Hence, the effects in PR will be very minimal, both in terms of rain and in terms of winds. The worst part of the storm is that NE quadrant. That quadrant never will reach PR, because of the rotation of the storm.


The Crow
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1821. Clearwater1 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting NCHurricane2009:


Do you think the storm track has been due west since St. Kitts?...because if it has been west instead of WNW...maybe the models will drive it through Hispaniola instead of its north coast...keep it weaker...and models will shift their tracks back to the west....
Yes, that's what I was thinking and posted a few minutes back. I think it is moving due west, but I'm only using pr radar and visible. The NHC knows best.
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1822. HurricaneDean07 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
If you think irene is going due west, you've been on this blog to long, or you sniffed the Troll spray too much, cuase Due west is not her direction, she is still heading north of west to WNW
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1823. Dennis8 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
EYE LIKE FEATURE STILL VERY APPARENT
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1824. Floodman 07:04 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting HoustonTxGal:


The UKMET is usually pretty good at their predictions.. I wonder why they are so much more west with their path? their modle puts it into the GOM.


Because the AB high is bridging west and the high over Texas is running from it slightly...
Member Since: August 2, 2006 Posts: 10 Comments: 9919
1826. KennyNebraska 07:05 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting MississippiWx:


Lol...Well, I don't know what else to show you then. Radar clearly shows that there is no eye as well. Convection doesn't even support an eye wall and you have to have an eye wall to have a true eye. It's not happening yet.


It looks like an eyewall is developing right now.

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t2/flash-vis.htm l

Notice the convection firing up around all sides of the CoC.
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1827. HoustonTxGal 07:05 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting Dennis8:


YES it does....Dr. Masters says to watch that model for long range


Does anyone have the Long Range UKMET model?? just wondering
Member Since: September 18, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 1038
1828. gugi182 07:05 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Well i will give you an update on the conditions outside my window in PUERTO RICO. The sky is starting to get a little more darker, but there's some patches of clear sky. No rain yet in the southwest part of the island but we did get a nice wind gust that shaked a little the palm trees in front of my house. WELL THAT'S MY UPDATE I'LL KEEP TUNING IN UNTIL I HAVE POWER.
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1829. Dennis8 07:05 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting Clearwater1:
Yes, that's what I was think and post a few minutes back. I think it is moving due west, but I'm only using pr radar and visible. The NHC knows best.


Yes due west for now
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1830. wolftribe2009 07:05 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Storm moving due west and an eye is starting to form. I believe an eye is forming near 17.5N 64W

Link

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1831. BrandiQ 07:05 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
I am kinda lost... the models have moved to the east and whatnot... How do we know it will not move back to the west?
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1832. Bluestorm5 07:06 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting FirstCoastMan:
Being here in north florida,the jacksonville area...Do i have anything to worry about?
People in Jacksonville area need to pay attention and just preview your hurricane plans.
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1833. Surferdude 07:06 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
She doesn't look too good right now ..IMO
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1834. srada 07:06 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


And don't bother coming to Georgia. When Floyd was threatening, it took me 12 hours to drive from Savannah to Athens, GA. That's normally a 3.5 hour drive...


Floyd was terrible here in Wilmington. Some genious finally realized that I-40 both east and west needed to be changed to outgoing traffic, by that time, chaos was pretty much indicated for evacuating residents
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1835. CarolinaHurricanes87 07:06 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting srada:
As a resident of Wilmington, NC, I haven't seen much in the local media about Irene, however I think things are about to change real quick! I am watching and waiting.


I am from Wilmington as well. My roomate works for WECT, and they dont seem to be very concerned yet either... even the weather guys! Thats why Im saying this eastward shift of the models is a big deal. Weve spent all week and weekend focusing on the eastern gulf and western florida (ok, maybe all of florida)... now an entire group of people from georgia to NC need to pay attention. I know many people here will be very surprised as I havent heard a single person mention this storm yet.

Not saying it will come this way, just that people here need to pay attention because right now... they arent
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1836. dearmas 07:06 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting USAFwxguy:


Forward. That is about the best the Blog can agree on right now.


Kidding... west, maybe some wnw


Thanks HA HA LOL. Just can't make out if its going to pass North of PR or not.
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1837. Dennis8 07:06 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting HoustonTxGal:


Does anyone have the Long Range UKMET model?? just wondering


Where are you in Houston? I used to work for FOX 26 as a meteorologist and Universal Wx at Hobby
Member Since: August 15, 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 441
1838. osuwxguynew 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Ultimately this is a stupid debate about eye/no eye, but people keep refuting an eye by saying a dry pocket of air... Funny that it keeps in the exact center of the storms rotation.

And as I said before, significant warming found by the aircraft recon.

In the end all that matters is that she is headed straight over PR, and then if she follows the GFS/ECMWF/HWRF and stays close to or off the north coast of Hispaniola, it will not be good for folks in the latter part of her path...
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1839. SavannahStorm 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
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1840. Dennis8 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting wolftribe2009:
Storm moving due west and an eye is starting to form. I believe an eye is forming near 17.5N 64W

Link



I agree..good analysis..Thanks
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1841. alvarig1263 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
It's been going west for quite a few hours now. Doesn't appear that way but if you look closely you can see where the circulation really was and that it has been moving due west for a while. Models will lean back towards west tonight IMO. Irene still in early stages and models are trying to get a handle on her.
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1842. HoustonTxGal 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting Dennis8:


Where are you in Houston? I used to work for FOX 26 as a meteorologist and Universal Wx at Hobby


I'm in Spring but have family down on Galveston Island.
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1843. mynameispaul 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
More likely than not:

1. Irene's going to joggle north and south
2. Going to change speed eventually
3. Models will continue to change
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1844. DocNDswamp 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
1738. MississippiWx

Indeed, as suspected... was clearly a relic of the dry swath between the N / NW side banding...

I believe we've seen all of the northward consolidation / relocation of the center that's been underway since yesterday... I'm seeing a general N of due west track currently, should scrape right along Puerto Rico's S coast...
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1845. MZT 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting SavannahStorm:


And don't bother coming to Georgia. When Floyd was threatening, it took me 12 hours to drive from Savannah to Athens, GA. That's normally a 3.5 hour drive...
Floyd was problematic because hurricane warnings kept being re-issued from Florida all the way up to Hatteras. Lots of wasted gas and boarding-up for folks on that storm.
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1846. TropicalAnalystwx13 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting WeatherNerdPR:


I knew the whole center hadn't made it in the radars view yet.
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1847. Bluestorm5 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
man, the comments is moving fast... I want to warn people from Florida to Carolinas to get your traffic plans ready just in case it get ugly. We do not want another Floyd mess.
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1848. obxnagshead 07:07 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting CarolinaHurricanes87:


I am from Wilmington as well. My roomate works for WECT, and they dont seem to be very concerned yet either... even the weather guys! Thats why Im saying this eastward shift of the models is a big deal. Weve spent all week and weekend focusing on the eastern gulf and western florida (ok, maybe all of florida)... now an entire group of people from georgia to NC need to pay attention. I know many people here will be very surprised as I havent heard a single person mention this storm yet.

Not saying it will come this way, just that people here need to pay attention because right now... they arent


We in Nags Head NC have not heard much either. Gonna get interesting around here...
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1849. masonsnana 07:08 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting HoustonTxGal:


The UKMET is usually pretty good at their predictions.. I wonder why they are so much more west with their path? their modle puts it into the GOM.
I thought and questioned the same thing!??
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1850. Dunkman 07:08 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Look at the UKMET. It initializes at 1008mb, and never has the pressure go lower than 1006mb until it impacts Hispanola. Clearly it has a very poor handle on the system and the track is dubious at best.
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1851. Floodman 07:08 PM GMT am 21. August 2011    
Quoting Dennis8:
EYE LIKE FEATURE STILL VERY APPARENT


OMG, DO YOU THINK THAT COULD MEAN DOOM?

Honestly, dude, quit yelling or get poofed...the storm is not striong enough to support an eyewal, hence no eye; ever look at clouds? They change over time and what your seeing is a momentary anomaly, unless this storm has gone through an RI phase no one noted...

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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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