(NOTE: Graphics For This Outlook Can Be Found At:
Overview
The one notable aspect of the
spring months has been the relative lack of a heat ridge in the Bermuda
position. Typically, 500MB height rises will take shape over the Sargasso Sea
during April, with a slow north and west lurching motion when viewing
atmospheric height mean charts. This year, the only sign of a subtropical high
within the Atlantic Basin has been over the Greater Antilles and Caribbean Sea.
So a minimalist forecast for hot weather seems appropriate in locations that are
likely to stay north of the positive height anomaly, with the highest readings
likely to take shape in the Southeast as the ridge becomes anchored, most likely
centered in the Atlanta/Macon GA corridor.
While the western states have seen
some very chilled anomalies (with cutoff lows in S CA during later April), rapid
rebounds in atmospheric heights and thicknesses have been noted through the West
and especially the Great Plains. A flat subtropical high has also emerged
recently north and west of HI into the Philippines. As this ridging gains in
latitude and controls the western rim of the Pacific Ocean, teleconnections
point toward a resurgence of the Sonoran heat ridge. Rapidly displacing the
onslaught of cold mP surges and shortwaves, I suspect that much of the western
U.S., especially the Puget Sound and Columbia Basin, will see a reversal in
trends and sharp change to hot/dry conditions that will occasionally take over
the CA Central Valley and other sectors of the Intermountain Region. Parts of
the heartland and the Desert Southwest, being in between the cores of the heat
ridges, may see essentially normal summer conditions. I suspect that energy
cresting the western ridge complex will eventually build a trough over the Great
Lakes and Corn Belt, resulting in lower maxima through much of eastern Canada
and adjacent areas of the Midwest and Northeast.
Temperatures
A long, hot summer? Well if you
live in the western and southeastern states, probably yes. But I must add that a
widespread, long lasting thermal anomaly is unlikely for two reasons. One is the
obvious late start of building a subtropical high in the Southeast. The other is
the still-active polar westerlies. While the jet stream will revert northward,
the likely presence of a vigorous ridge complex in the western states would seem
to favor digging of energy from the Prairie Provinces into the Great Lakes/Corn
Belt and then the Northeast. So much of eastern Canada should stay cool, and
near normal values the likely outcome from the Midwest into the Mid-Atlantic and
New England states.
Precipitation
Concerns for large
scale drought should fade over the lower Great Plains and Mid-Atlantic
states by June, largely as a result of shifts in the upper level wind patterns.
However, water supplies look to be tested in two regions: the western and
southeastern states, which is where heat ridges are likely to become established
through much of the summer. The presence of a strong positive height anomaly in
both locations may actually help moisture advection for both the "monsoon"
season in the Desert Southwest and "popcorn" convection in the midsection of the
nation.
The best convective potential will
probably set up from the Upper Mississippi Valley into the Northeast, with
thunderstorm and severe weather production (either via supercells, spearhead
storms, or MCC development) increased. Tropical systems could end up as a huge
enhancement of rainfall production, particularly in the southern tier but also
along the East Coast later in the summer and into early
fall.
Tropical Cyclones
(Atlantic Basin)
Unless the thermal profile of the
Pacific Ocean changes character toward a thoroughly warm El Nino (all sectors of
the equatorial regions rising into a positive SST anomaly), we are headed for
our third straight badly damaging hurricane season. The overall character of the
500MB forecast would seem to favor tropical cyclone output and landfall
possibilities falling somewhere in between 2004 and 2005, certainly not good
news for the state of FL. The additional specter of merging heat ridges (Sonoran
+ Bermudan) makes for an increased risk to TX, possibly in August and/or
September. In addition, during early autumn, as the ridge complex shifts ever
westward, possibilities exist for tropical cyclone interaction with a mean
trough in the Great Lakes and Midwest; this the Atlantic Coastal Plain may have
potential for mayhem that has largely been missed during the past two years.
Overall numbers of tropical systems should be high, although the landmark 2005
season total should not be threatened; the ITCZ is about 3/4 as active as a year
previous, with gaps in convective pulsation occurring (see full disc satellite
views and note relative quiet in the Indian Ocean frame).
PREDICTION FOR 2006 Hurricane
Season:
2
Subtropical Storms
20 Named Storms
10
Hurricanes
5
Major Hurricanes
1
Super Hurricane
June
Some danger of
development in western Gulf of Mexico; perhaps one named tropical storm or a
tropical depression. Wind impacts minimal, but if 500MB weakness persists as
forecast TX, LA coasts and Arklatex vicinity may be affected by excessive
precipitation. Odds of U.S. tropical storm strike: 1 in
12.
July
"Cape Verde" type
waves may get off to a running start if a) positive thermal anomalies persist
and grow in eastern Atlantic Ocean and b) ridging extends from southeastern U.S.
through Sargasso Sea. Impact on Lesser Antilles or even Puerto Rico and
Hispaniola is possible. Odds of U.S. (Territory) hurricane strike: 1 in
10.
August
Tropical cyclone
formation should get in gear as African waves ride underneath mid-Atlantic Ocean
ridge and reach Greater Antilles with perhaps as much as three major impacts. S
FL and S TX could see interaction with a major hurricane. Odds of U.S. hurricane
strike: 1 in 4.
September
I suspect that the
ninth month will be the most dangerous in terms of both intensity of tropical
cyclones and possibilities for an impacting (as opposed to grazing) landfall on
a U.S. coastline. With waters at their warmest, and the heat ridges at their
most inland and northern positions, westward moving hurricanes may strike FL,
Gulf Coast points (TX highly suspect), OR along the Eastern Seaboard (Carolinas
or SE VA). If ENSO conditions maintain the "wobbling neutral" character and
500MB troughing begins to assert itself across the Great Lakes, a system along
the lines of Hugo (1989) Isabel (2003) or Floyd (1999) could appear. Odds of
U.S. hurricane strike: 1 in 3.
October
With ridging
receding and the 500MB trough beginning to anchor through the Great Lakes and
Tennessee Valley, emphasis will shift to the Eastern Seaboard for hurricane
strike threats. A Caribbean Sea hurricane may also appear with threats to
resorts and perhaps to AL or N FL. Later in the month, older frontal structures
or isolated cold core lows could give rise to subtropical storms in the western
Atlantic Ocean. Odds of U.S. hurricane strike: 1 in
6.