Watching the Caribbean, Gulf for possible tropical development | Tracking the Tropics
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- Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
- The tropics remain eerily quiet, but there could be signs of life in the Gulf and Caribbean waters in the coming week or so. WNCN Chief Meteorologist Wes Hohenstein joins the Tracking the Tropics team to talk impacts from Potential Tropical Cyclone 8, which battered the Carolinas with several inches of rain, and to break down what could be brewing in late September.
Tune in to Tracking the Tropics live Tuesdays at 12:30 ET/11:30 CT on WFLA.com and stay ahead of potential development with the Tracking the Tropics newsletter: nxslink.wfla.c...
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It's been less active because of all the prayers being said, and God is protecting us.
theres no god believe that shit if u want its a nice thought though
Now he changed his mind?
Hi Rebecca, great weather forecast, here we go again with activity in the tropics, good show, rgs
I follow the Tampa and the Miami, Florida weathe because I have friends that live there. Great job guys. I live in South Louisiana.
How did you make out in that last one?
It's wild how every meteorologist warned this year was going to be a very active year and then it all just fizzled out. We're only at Gordon and we're past the traditional most active part of the season.
If it was a normal atmospheric summer and or la niña kicked in when it was originally expected to, we would have had a wild season. I think the earth said yall ain't ready
Big surprise. A warming planet leads to extremes that cannot be forecasted with models based on old data. But you climate change deniers don't want to hear that. The forecasts will get worse as the planet continues to heat at exponentially quicker rates. Humanity is fucked.
@@goku7196 I guess my point was just about every meteorologist got it wrong. It kind erodes some trust in their predictions and models. I get how things can change but it's as if meteorology itself isn't an exact science. And I'm a person who wishes it was.
They say THIS year will be the worst- EVERY YEAR since I started paying attention in 2001 and yet here we are.
@@worldwidestuff5567 You are WRONG. They DO NOT say that every year. You are mistaken.
Sept 2018. Hurricane Florence long lasting slow moving, lashed the Carolinas. Killed 15 people and lots of pigs.
Relentless wind and rain causing catastropic flooding , some areas saw as much as 40"
It only takes one,we've had ours with Francine so,who's up next,?
We’re up to I now
La niña took its time that's one reason
You mean hurricane Dennis not tropical storm Dennis
Every year is supposed to be the worst Hurricane year ever FROM GLOBAL WARMING they've been saying this for at least the last 20 years- that's the game they play- BLAH BLAH BLAH.
They regularly predict below average seasons, they did for 2023 (which actually ended up being above average.) We've seen a string of above average seasons since 2020, and more often than not the forecasters get it right.
2020 was the most active year on record and it was forecast to be an above average to a hyperactive season. 2021 was the third most active season on record, and was forecast to be above average. 2022 was an average season, and forecast to be average to slightly above average.
Percentages fir LA hit?
SAL, neutral la niña, atlantic la niña and tutts rain in africa mixed bag
Re: why aren't we further along in the named storms list? The models are always predicting doom and gloom b/c the models are written by climate change doomsday alarmists. Garbage in, garbage out, garbage results.
Lol, patience. We have months to go.
Cancel your vaca days at the station, you should know better.
Mississippi Gulf Coast probable impacts???
Maybe because Joes' 😅new green deal😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅