I Like the New NHC Homepage
Tropical Storm Marty, left, is losing it’s punch in the Pacific, and steering currents, are turning it away from Baja California. The steering currents in the Pacific Ocean are one of the main reasons the West Coast of the United States is spared from tropical systems. When these storms form in the eastern Pacific Ocean, the storm will start it’s move toward the north, northwest, but eventually it will turn out to sea. (Note, one hurricane computer model, strengthens the storm, and takes it toward Baja, but NHC forecasters are not buying into that.) Read the NHC discussion.
I just noticed something really cool about the National Hurricane Center’s page this year. Last year, they started posting a tropical outlook image on their front page, like the image in this post. As you can see, today, it says, “Tropical Cyclone Activity is Not Expected During the Next 48 Hours.” If there is a tropical system, they will have the icon for it posted on the page, and then usually they have a couple of shaded circles on the page indicated areas of possible development. The circles are either yellow (low chance), orange (medium chance) or red (high chance) of development. This gives the internet user a quick glance at the tropics, and the areas of disturbed weather the NHC forecasters are looking at for development into tropical systems. THIS YEAR, they’ve started giving you the latest stats on the storm right below the name of the storm. For Marty, it looks like this:
8:00 AM PDT Thu Sep 17
Location: 19.7°N 113.1°W
Max sustained: 45 mph
Moving: NNW at 2 mph
Min pressure: 1003 mb
I love this feature. Before, you had to pull up the advisory or discussion, and it was in somewhere in the middle of the discussion. This makes it a lot easier to track these storms on your hurricane map!
I’m working on behind the scenes stuff today, trying to get my KIDS STUFF category updated, and my frequently asked questions link up and running. Hope you have a great day!
-Dawn Brown

