• Sailing is all about the Weather.

    Big into the exploration of Atlantic Hurricanes since Katrina came uninvited into his world, James (Jim) Gurley (JamesG161) has followed every Tropical Storm birthed in Atlantic, Gulf and Caribbean waters since. Being a boater, he knows that we often need more time to prepare than we get from the TV weather folk. Jim relies on the science of storm development to share early warning info with friends and fellow boaters.

    Early in 2018, Jim and John Shepard, (JSSailem) started to chat about the weather data available. John asked Jim to help forecast Pacific NW storms, and this morphed into discussions on weather forecasting.

    For John, sailing in the PNW is sometimes hit and miss. One day is ugly, then a string of beautiful days but no wind, followed by a series of blue-sky days and 12 knot breezes. Being ready for those great sailing days means you need to look to the Pacific Ocean and what is brewing. John has been into Pacific NW Weather since the 1970’s when his first PNW November storm hit bringing more than 40 days and 40 nights of continual rain.

    Together we want to share information, new APPs, safety, and thoughts about letting the weather help you. Identify some of the resources for sailors and help prepare you for your next sailboat outing.

    It is far better to go out on the water knowing what to expect in weather terms, than to be out on the water and see dark ominous clouds suddenly appear, unprepared.

Invest 91L

JamesG161

SBO Weather and Forecasting Forum Jim & John
Feb 14, 2014
7,831
Hunter 430 Waveland, MS
Models are not tracking well as of this date.

two_atl_7d0-4.png


best track so far...
91L_geps_latest.png


This one will be a Hurricane soon.

Dammit Jim..
 

jssailem

SBO Weather and Forecasting Forum Jim & John
Oct 22, 2014
23,468
CAL 35 Cruiser #21 moored EVERETT WA
Sarah Dust, Dry air shearing, and just plain cool waters in the Atlantic conspire to limit the production of storms this year.

Thank you, ENSO currents.
 
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Jun 21, 2004
2,959
Beneteau 343 Slidell, LA
Sarah Dust, Dry air shearing, and just plain cool waters in the Atlantic conspire to limit the production of storms this year.
Thank you, ENSO currents.
Hope those parameters hold through October. We are approaching peak hurricane season now. Starting to get cool fronts into Gulf as we speak; hopefully, the fronts will start cooling off waters sooner this year & produce drier air & shear. Not to mention, cooler temps & lower humidity; always refreshing after a brutal summer!
 
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