You guys take weather nerdism to a whole new level. I always thought my
father was a weather junkie.
When I was a newspaperman I was teased by my colleagues because I learned
that cold air generally moves in wedges that come up under warmer air and
cause snow. So all my winter weather stories cited wedges of cold air, etc.
I don't think I hever hit them with millibars.
--Bob Whitmire
Certified Neanderthal
On Fri, Oct 2, 2015 at 4:07 PM, Ken Norton <ken@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > You know I'm saving all your posts on the storm. When it's over, I'll
> post
> > a report on my findings. <g>
>
> Chris and I are your list weather nerds. I absolutely love this kind
> of thing. Which reminds me, we're coming up on the thirty year
> anniversary on November 10.
>
> Anyway, it will be interesting to see what Chris and I get right and
> how we got things wrong.
>
> Regardless, I'm not agreeing with any of the models at this point. The
> logical path is for it to stay west of Bermuda, but remain off the
> east coast. Chris pointed out the change in the 500mb level which
> changes everything. Who knows what this dry airmass blowing in from
> the Azores is going to do either. I'm going to revise my statement
> about westward movement across Cuba because it lost its window of
> opportunity there.
>
> AG
> --
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