Wednesday, June 05, 2019

If 500 tornadoes weren't enough....

June 3, 2019

Surface Sea Temperature Map (click here) of the tropical Atlantic and the northwest Atlantic Ocean

Below is NOAA's Hurricane Prediction Center's reporting of a tropical disturbance that can result into a hurricane. The first of the season.


National Hurricane CenterVerified account @NHC_Atlantic 
Jun 4

June 4, 2019
A broad low (click here) over the western Gulf of Mexico is producing widespread showers. Although the chances of it developing into a tropical depression are now low, the threat for heavy rainfall persists. Follow products by the Weather Prediction Center.

Kindly remember these early season storms are some of the most disastrous in this Climate Crisis troposphere. The early storms are stagnating over coastal cities and staying for days.

June 4, 2019
By Jennifer Larino
On Tuesday morning (June 4), (click here) the National Hurricane Center was monitoring showers and thunderstorm activity linked to a broad area of low pressure over the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. The slow-moving disturbance had become disorganized since Monday, but forecasters said it’s still possible it could strengthen to a depression before moving inland over northeastern Mexico later Tuesday.

Heavy rainfall is the primary weather threat. The disturbance is “likely to produce heavy rainfall over portions of eastern Mexico, southeastern Texas and the Lower Mississippi River Valley” over coming days, according to the forecast.

The disturbance has a 40% chance of developing into a depression over the next 48 hours, forecasters said....