The big worry of course is Tropical Storm Isaac, which may collide with Florida this coming week, just in time for the Republican National Convention in Tampa Monday.

This from NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
The Atlantic Ocean is kicking into high gear with low pressure areas that have a chance at becoming tropical depressions, storms and hurricanes. Satellite imagery from NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites have provided visible, infrared and microwave data on four low pressure areas. In addition, NASA’s GOES Project has been producing imagery of all systems using NOAA’s GOES-13 satellite to see post-Tropical Storm Gordon, Tropical Depression 9 (Now Isaac, and Systems 95L and 96L.

Tropical Storm Gordon is no longer a tropical storm and is fizzling out east of the Azores. Tropical Depression 9 was born on Aug. 20 and continues to get organized. Behind Tropical Depression 9 in the eastern Atlantic is another low pressure area called System 96L. In the Gulf of Mexico lies another low, called System 95L. In an image taken from NOAA’s GOES-13 satellite on Aug. 21 at 7:45 a.m. EDT, all of the systems were visible except for post-tropical Storm Gordon. The storms are seen lined up along the Atlantic basin from left to right with System 95L in the Gulf of Mexico, Tropical Depression 9 just east of the Caribbean Sea and System 96L in the eastern Atlantic Ocean.
NOAA manages the GOES-13 satellite, and NASA’s GOES Project uses the data to create images and animations out of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
Tropical Depression 9 (now Issac)
On Aug. 20 at 0435 UTC (12:35 a.m. EDT) before System 94L organized into Tropical Storm 9, NASA’s Aqua satellite passed overhead, and the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument captured an infrared image of the storm. It showed that the strongest convection (rising air that forms the thunderstorms that make up the tropical cyclone) were located south of the center of circulation. Those thunderstorms had cold cloud top temperatures of -63 Fahrenheit (-52 Celsius) that indicated there was strong uplift in the low pressure area, and were an indication that the system could strengthen, which it did later into a depression.

Tropical Depression 9 has been the cause for tropical storm warning posts in a number of islands. On Aug. 21, a Tropical Storm Warning is in effect for Dominica, Guadeloupe, Desirade, Les Saintes, Marie Galante, and St. Martin.
TD9 appears as a rounded storm on the GOES-13 satellite image from Aug. 21. In the image, low pressure area “System 96L” trails to the southwest of TD9.
On Aug. 21 at 8 a.m. EDT (1200 UTC) Tropical Depression 9 (TD9) had maximum sustained winds near 35 mph (55 kmh) and is expected to strengthen into a tropical storm later today. It was located about 645 miles (1,035 km) east of Guadeloupe near latitude 15.1 north and longitude 51.8 west. TD90 is moving toward the west near 20 mph (32 kmh) and is expected to continue moving in that direction for the next couple of days, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC).
NHC said that the cyclone should move through the central Lesser Antilles on Wed., Aug. 22 and move into the Caribbean Sea the next day. NHC expects rainfall between 4 and 8 inches to affect the northern Windward and the Leeward Islands, accompanied by heavy surf and rip tides.
System 96L in Eastern Atlantic
System 96L appears well-defined on the GOES-13 satellite imagery. It is associated with a tropical wave, and is spinning about 425 miles southwest of the Cape Verde Islands. The NHC said that System 96L could very well become the tenth tropical depression of the Atlantic Hurricane Season in the next day or two. It is moving to the west at 15 mph.
System 95L Struggles in the Gulf of Mexico
The eastern-most low pressure area in the Atlantic Ocean basin is System 95L, located in the western Gulf of Mexico. It is producing disorganized showers and thunderstorms just off-shore of the northeastern coast of Mexico. The low-level center of circulation is also elongated, which is a bad sign for a tropical cyclone trying to organize. Tropical cyclones need a strong, rounded circulation to strengthen. The NHC noted that slow development is still possible before System 95L moves inland in northeastern Mexico later in the day on Wed. Aug 21. The system has a 30 percent chance of developing before that happens. Once inland, its chances for development are greatly reduced because it will be cut off from its life-giving warm water supply.
Tropical Storm Gordon is History
On Monday, August 20, satellite imagery and surface data revealed that Tropical Storm Gordon lost his tropical characteristics, making it a post-tropical cyclone. According to Reuters news, Gordon caused some power outages, fallen trees and minor flooding.
The National Hurricane Center issued their final advisory on Gordon on August 20 at 5 p.m. EDT (2100 UTC). At that time, Gordon still had maximum sustained winds near 45 mph (75 kmh) and was weakening. Gordon was about 370 miles (595 km) east-northeast of the Azores, near latitude 39.2 north and longitude 20.3 west. Gordon was moving east-northeast near 16 mph (26 kmh) and was expected to turn southeast while weakening further. Gordon is expected to dissipate in a couple of days east of Portugal.
To see an image of Tropical Storm Gordon captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument onboard NASA’s Terra satellite on Aug. 20 at 8:20 a.m. EDT, before it transitioned into a post-tropical storm, visit: http://lance-modis.eosdis.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/imagery/single.cgi?image=Gordon.A2012233.1220.2km.jpg
Could mean a little stormy weather for the GOP convention, eh?
Don’t forget the European model…which has predicted a farther west path for Isaac. No one wants to think of that possibility.
Looks like ( by its reports ) that Isaac is still approaching this buoy.
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=41101
See below for area maps and additional stations.
The area is full of monitoring stations and/or buoys.
Click on the station # for data (some will return: Data from this station are not quality controlled by NDBC).
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/maps/Caribbean.shtml
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/maps/Caribbean_inset.shtml
Use the arrows on the map edges to move all over the world.
Have fun !
The fresh water aquifers and reservoirs associated with the Everglades and Lake Okeechobee could use a really good, protracted rain deluge …. or five, to help restore the fresh water levels a bit from the unrelenting demand from municipalities like Miami.
MtK
Currently we on the central west coast of Florida are experiencing heavy rains daily. This will saturate the ground so the timing of Issac on top of all that rain is going to cause major problems with flooding, erosion and uprooted trees, even if it is just a tropical storm. I bet my money on the latest GFS track which could take the eastern eye wall directly over my house. Fortunately I invested in new steel shutters this spring. Five days out: checking supplies and hurricane emergency kit. Inspecting trees for loose branches and cutting any that could come down in stronger winds.
Looks like Isaac is tracking south of this buoy.
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/station_page.php?station=42060
Winds are building, pressure dropping.
It is going right at Hati and Guantanimo.
At least right now, it seems NDBC/NOAA has their servers fired up.
Instantanous data from the Caribbean Sea.
http://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/maps/Caribbean.shtml
Isaac seems to have gone south of the initially projected track on early Aug. 23.
Isaac seems to be aiming South-Southwest towards the northern tip of Colombia at 10:20 EST.
NOAA and other forecasters expect it to restart heading West-Northwest soon.
This would put it further to the west of Tampa, FL.
eric1skeptic says:
August 22, 2012 at 6:02 am
philjourdan, the tropical storms that make it to the Mid Atlantic can do a lot of good in a dry year….
_______________________________
DRY???
The southern east coast has been anything BUT DRY except for a couple weeks in June! You really only need a storm about once a week to keep things green BTW so that is any number over 5 storms a month.
Here is the # of rainy days in the summer for this year at selected cities inland between the Appalachians and the seacoast.
For the year 2012 month number of days it rained, fog, (cld = cloudy days) most are partly cloudy, NR=No record
Florida
Homestead: Lat/Lon: 25.5° N 80.5° W
May, 18, 11T (clds) Jun 18, 10T (10 clds) Jul 22, 20T (5 clds), Aug 22, 18T (4 clds) + 3NR
Orlando: Lat/Lon: 28.5° N 81.4° W
June 17 (6 clds), July 15 (15 clds), August 23 (5 clds) + 3 no record
Ocala: Lat/Lon: 29.2° N 82.1° W
June 16, 9T (7 clds), July 20, 13T 2 fog (8 clds) Aug 21, 20T ( 7 clds) + 3 no record
Gainesville: Lat/Lon: 29.6° N 82.3° W
June 18 (7 clds) July 18, 2 fog (8 clds) August 22 (6 clds) + 3 no record
Georgia
Tifton: Lat/Lon: 31.5° N 83.5° W
Jun 12 (7 clds) Jul 24, 1 fog (1 clds) + 3 no record, Aug 19, 1 fog (8 clds) + 3 no record
Madison: Lat/Lon: 33.6° N 83.5° W
Jun 6 (13 clds) Jul 20, (8 clds) + 3 no record, Aug 14, 1 fog (9 clds) + 4 no record
Ellijay: Lat/Lon: 34.7° N 84.5° W
Jun 7 (14 clds) Jul 22, 3 fog (6 clds) , Aug 15, 2 fog (8 clds) + 3 no record
South Carolina
Walterboro: Lat/Lon: 32.9° N 80.7° W
Jun 9, 5 fog (10 clds), Jul 19, (4 clds)+ 1 no record, Aug 21, 2 fog (5 clds) + 3 no record
Manning: Lat/Lon: 33.6° N 80.3° W
Jun 7 (13 clds)+ 3 no record, Jul 17, (3 clds)+ 1 no record, Aug 18, 2 fog (7 clds) + 3 no record
Camden: Lat/Lon: 34.3° N 80.6° W
Jun 11, 1 fog (9 clds) Jul 17, 3 fog (1 clds)+ 2 no record, Aug 16, 2 fog (8 clds) + 3 no record
North Carolina ( this is where the change was a few years ago)
Lumberton: 34.6° N 79.0° W
Jun 9 (13 clds) Jul 17, 1 fog (3 clds) , Aug 15, 1 fog (9 clds) + 3 no record
Goldsboro: Lat/Lon: 35.4° N 78.1° W
Jun 13 (12 clds) Jul 17, 1 fog (9 clds) , Aug 15, 1 fog (10 clds) + 3 no record
Rocky Mount: Lat/Lon: 36.0° N 77.8° W
Jun 11 4 fog (3 clds) Jul 18, 1 fog (7 clds) , Aug 11, 4 fog (12 clds) + 3 no record
Sanford (piedmont) Lat/Lon: 35.5° N 79.2° W
Jun 5, 1 fog (16 clds) Jul 16, 3 fog (5 clds) , Aug 12, 4 fog (12 clds) + 3 no record
DATA from : classic.wunderground.com/ and last five days is from five day forecast.
Have a look at the GOES animation at http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/east/carb/flash-rb.html showing Isaac still not beginning to turn northwards.
The page linked under my name is “Meteorology for South Florida and the Caribbean”, with links to all the pertinent Web resources.
Every time I see one of those hurricane track prediction maps it reminds me of the “We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!” line from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
Let’s go a little to the right.
http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b331/kevster1346/BogotaNorthbound.jpg
New Orleans: get prepped now.
Which center will be the center? It’s still a bunch of vortexes messing with our eyesight. Be careful not to wish-cast, seeing the one you want and being blind to another. The morning will show more.
“The amazing image that shows every hurricane and tropical storm since 1851”
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2193015/The-amazing-map-shows-worlds-recorded-hurricanes-single-image.html
“Reveals every extreme weather event since records began
Shows unique ‘bottom up’ view of the earth, with Antarctica in the middle of the image”