97L gets disrupted by Hispaniola
A tropical wave (Invest 97L) near the north coast of Hispaniola has been disrupted by interaction with the island, plus the effects of moderate wind shear of 10 - 20 knots. The storm is no longer a threat to develop into a tropical depression today, and the Hurricane Hunter flight that was scheduled for today has been postponed until Thursday. The disturbance has brought heavy rains of 8+ inches to Culebra, Vieques, the Virgin Islands, and some of the northern Lesser Antilles Islands. Wunderblogger Weather456 reported that the power was knocked out on the island of St. Kitts for about 24 hours, due to the intense lightning associated with 97L. All of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands are under flash flood watches today.
Satellite images of 97L show a relatively meager number of heavy thunderstorms that are not well-organized. The curved bands to the north and east of the center have disappeared, and there is no evidence of low-level spiral banding or of a surface circulation. Surface observations over the northern Dominican Republic show only light winds, with no westerly winds indicating that a surface circulation is forming. Long-range radar loops from San Juan show a much reduced amount of thunderstorm activity.

Figure 1. Total radar-estimate rainfall for 97L.
Track Forecast for 97L
The storm is in a fairly straightforward steering current environment, and 97L should progress steadily to the west-northwest through Saturday. The rains from 97L's thunderstorms will bring the threat of isolated flooding to the Dominican Republic today, and to Haiti on today and Thursday. Heavy rains from 97L will affect eastern Cuba, the Turks and Caicos Islands, and the eastern Bahamas Thursday, and South and Central Florida can expect heavy rains to arrive Thursday night or Friday morning. The latest suite of model runs from 2am EDT this morning (6Z) foresee 97L making landfall on the Florida coast somewhere between Miami and Cape Canaveral on Friday, then continuing into the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday. Only the Canadian model foresees a threat to Texas, and the other models predict a second landfall between eastern Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle.
Intensity Forecast for 97L
The primary detriment to development of 97L today will be its close proximity to the landmass of Hispaniola. Once the storm pulls away from the island tonight, 97L has a better chance of development. Also hindering development over the next two days will be the presence of dry, stable air in its path over the Bahamas, thanks to the upper-level low to the north of the Dominican Republic. The SHIPS model predicts shear will stay in the moderate range, 10 - 20 knots, over the next three days, which should allow for some steady development of 97L on Thursday and Friday before it reaches Florida. NHC is giving 97L a 60% chance of developing into a tropical depression by Friday, which is a reasonable forecast. I think there is a 70% chance 97L will eventually become Tropical Storm Bonnie, sometime in the next five days. Sudden rapid development before 97L reaches Florida is unlikely, due to the storm's current state of disorganization and the dry air over the Bahamas. It's very unlikely that 97L has time to organize into a hurricane before hitting Florida. I put the odds of 97L making it to hurricane strength before reaching Florida at 5%, and I give a 20% chance it will be a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico. The probability of 97L being a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico will depend heavily upon how long the storm spends over water in the Gulf, which is very uncertain. The environment in the Gulf of Mexico should be favorable for intensification, if passage over Florida does not disrupt the storm too much.
I'll have a new post Thursday morning, or earlier if there's a major change to 97L.
Famed climate scientist Steven Schneider dies
Steven Schneider, one of the most influential and talented climate scientists of our time, died on Monday. Ricky Rood has a tribute to Dr. Schneider in today's blog. Ricky comments, "He is known for feistiness. His last book was Science as a Contact Sport: Inside the Battle to Save Earth's Climate. He was a man who was, bluntly, harassed and threatened by those who did not like his message. He never shrank from the battle."
Jeff Masters
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Pressure usually rises in the morning...drops in the afternoon...rises in the evening...drops in the early morning.
This comment has been removed for violating the Community Standards.
My comment got removed :(
But 97L seems to be organizing. So bad news Baha.
Good afternoon.
I dont know about slowing it... but you could just move your mouse over the hours at the top of the screen and look at it frame by frame..
has quite a way to go... Yes... it is gaining some "organized convection".... But its going to have to work really hard to be able to develop
Storm, take a look at my post at 1421. What are you thoughts?
See what you've gone and done:
You;ve scared Taz
I agree with you on that...it's exposed. Near about 21.8N and 72.4W.
yup
TD thursday
TS thursday night
and hurricane by friday AM
my forcast
Hi. What's your take on 97L?
Wow, somebody finally said what I was thinking. I think that climatology suggests where storms may form, but as far as track, it's pointless to bring up past storms.
plausible.. so I take it your thinking the straits?
97L is a persistent little bugger.. these little buggers usually develop into a serious headache for someone. I've seen far worse looking invests at this stage that have become powerful systems. Whether or not conditions are going to favorable for that to happen we'll wait and see. I do see a 40 mph TS by Saturday though.
You have a very low opinion of me...you're not far wrong, but still...
yup lol
By "lopsided", you mean sheared , right?
you better run for the hills
For what it's worth, it looks to me like the upper low will track parallel to 97L for duration of the storm. Can't see it ever making hurricane strength.
Really hoping that this doesn't hit the oil spill at anything higher than TD !
Yeah.. It does have the potential to be a big problem.... and yes.... there have been horrible looking invests... much much worse than this.... and yeah sometime between now and Sat I expect Bonnie from this... heck... maybe even Hurricane Bonnie
Yes, a sheared TS.. Especially if the storm remains pretty close to the ULL.
Quoting TampaSpin:
For the sake of Texas / Louisiana areas...they better start wishcasting that 97L gets a little stronger and then goes North some....if 97L misses Florida as a weak storm, that may just be the worst case scerino for Texas/Louisiana area IMO!
its a blob invest nothing else may never be anything else quit scaring people
POOF
That must be a joke as there are no "hills" in the Bahamas and South Florida.....Right?
and besides, we NEED the rain. At least here in N. Ft. Myers, we've had yet another dry rainy season thus far. Seems when I was a kid and up until recently, every day between 3 and 5 pm the thunderboomers and heavy rains would come.
Not anymore...weirdness...
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