Posted on 05/01/2015 11:00:23 AM PDT by Red Badger
The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June through November. However, the atmosphere doesn't always conform to that. Occasionally a storm develops early, and that could happen off the Southeast coast next week.
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Setup For Potential Low
The Setup
The potential setup for this begins with a leftover, fading frontal boundary over the southwest Atlantic, the Bahamas and Cuba. This is the same frontal boundary that brought a much-needed soaking to South Florida earlier this week and gave Key West its third-heaviest April day of rain on record Wednesday.
This old frontal boundary will be revived by an infusion of energy from the southern, or subtropcial, branch of the jet stream. This will cause an area of low pressure to form near the northwest Bahamas or off Florida's East Coast on Tuesday or Wednesday.
Because water temperatures are generally running above average in the Bahamas and over the Gulf Stream now, according to senior meteorologist Stu Ostro, this would help fuel thunderstorms near the low's circulation, though he emphasizes that whether the system becomes a subtropical cyclone will ultimately depend more on what's going on in the atmosphere.
This area of disturbed weather is then expected to be drawn to the north or northeast through mid-late next week.
Tropical or Not?
This low may not be a typical low-pressure system with fronts you may see over, say, the Plains states. It may also not be a tropical depression or storm like you see in the Atlantic or Pacific Oceans in summer. It may be a combination of those, called a subtropical cyclone.
Our friends at Weather Underground have a full explanation of subtropical cyclones. Basically, a subtropical depression or storm exhibits features of both tropical and non-tropical systems, with a broad wind field, no cold or warm fronts, and generally low-topped thunderstorms spaced some distance from the center.
Subtropical cyclones typically are associated with upper-level lows and have colder temperatures aloft, whereas tropical cyclones are fully warm-core, and upper-level high pressure systems overhead help facilitate their intensification.
Because of this hybrid nature, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) still issues advisories and forecasts (i.e. projected path) for subtropical depressions and storms and assigns a number or name much like a regular tropical depression or tropical storm.
On rare occasions, if thunderstorms cluster close enough and persist near the center, latent heat given off aloft from the thunderstorms can warm the air enough to make the storm a fully tropical storm. What Does This Mean Next Week?
The bottom line is that by mid to late next week, that low near the Bahamas or Southeast coast may sprout enough convection near its circulation to be called a subtropical depression or storm.
If that occurs, the NHC would issue forecast advisories. The first name of the 2015 Atlantic hurricane season is Ana.
Where this low tracks remains highly uncertain this far out.
Unless it remains well offshore and weak, a system like this can produce high surf, rip currents, even some coastal flooding or beach erosion. If it tracks close enough to the Southeast coast, areas of locally heavy rain are possible in those areas.
At this point, the chance of this system becoming a fully tropical system appears to be low, but not zero.
So this isn't something to be overly worried about just yet. We'll continue to monitor the forecast over the next several days, so check back with us at weather.com and The Weather Channel for the latest.
It's Happened Recently
Some recent Atlantic hurricane seasons have jumped the June 1 starting gun.
(MORE: When Hurricane Season Starts Early)
Most recently, in May 2012, a pair of tropical storms, Alberto and Beryl, both formed off the coast of the Carolinas, Georgia and north Florida.
Beryl washed out the Memorial Day weekend, and was the strongest tropical cyclone to make a U.S. landfall before June 1 on record, with 70 mph maximum sustained winds.
Five years earlier, a cut-off low-pressure system off the Southeast coast morphed into Subtropical Storm Andrea. Before officially gaining the subtropical designation, the wrapped-up low was responsible for a 2-3 foot storm surge in St. Johns and Flagler Counties in Florida. A surfer and four crew members of a sailing vessel lost their lives in high surf from Andrea.
There was even an Atlantic tropical storm in late April 2003, ironically also named Ana.
In all, there have been 18 named Atlantic tropical storms, subtropical storms or hurricanes before June 1 since 1950, occurring in 16 different years. Eight of those made a U.S. landfall. MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Hurricane Strikes By County, Parish

We, here on the Florida Gulf Coast have had hurricanes or Tropical Storms every year that ends in a '5' sin 1965..................
PING!.................
They sound almost hopeful.
They will then trumpet “Global Warming” every chance they get.
they haven’t been right for ten years....maybe this year
Like they don’t now?.................
Seems to follow an 11 year cycle........................give or take a year or so. We had Hurricane Ivan in ‘04.................
True.
But anything they can point to as supposed proof will be crowed over incessantly.
“They sound almost hopeful.”
The carrion buzzards that they are...
The only job where you can be wrong 50% of the time (unless you’re a weatherman in San Diego) and still get a full paycheck.
Keeping a weather eye out this year more than usual; for my Marine son is onboard Corpus Christi NAS for flight training.
Two months early and they can’t help themselves. Start the panic now. Idiots.
It could - Or it could not.
Climate and storm prognosticators haven't been doing well at all in at least the last 10 years or so.
Remember - the costal regions were supposed to be flooded by rising sea levels by 2010.....
And we were supposed to see more hurricane strikes than average when we have actually had far fewer.
Maybe they need a new Weather Dart Board.
They are.
We had a cold wet summer last year, and this past winter was cold, and unpleasant.
Yet somehow it was the “warmest year EVER”.
Somehow it escaped me how my pipes froze every time I boiled water...
*snerk*
Any weather event they think they can get away with, they will buzzard circle over it and then pounce.
Maybe its just my perception, but remember major hurricanes struck at the time of both the 2008 and 2012 GOP conventions. And I could swear the media were giddy about hurricanes striking so as to push the news of the Republican conventions off the news. The 2012 Republican convention was in Tampa which was right in the area affected by that hurricane, which also seemed to excite the media types.
Then again maybe I just misread the media being excited about those hurricanes.
Global Climate Change models clearly predict an early Atlantic hurricane season. Also a late one. Also no one at all. I’d say they pretty much have it covered.
Yah gotta unnerstan what Al Gore discovered. Everybody knows bout duh latent heat but it were Gore what discovered blatant heat.
It happen when cee-oh-two from speechifying get into duh atmosphere. An everywun know dat man Gore can speechify up a storm at duh drop of a hat. Bam!
They were very giddy.
It wasn’t just your perception.
The Gore Effect: Anytime he does a GW speech in winter, the location will experience a blizzard of epic proportions.
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