NHC at 10 AM upgraded Invest 91-L to Tropical Depression # 2 as her circulation is slowly becoming better defined. However, recent satellite views continue to show a disorganize system that appears to be stationary. T-Storms are trying to form around the center, but higher up drier air is limiting development.
The 1 PM NHC update indicates T.D. # 2 to be stationary (North at 1 mph) as they await data from the Recon aircraft. Their track brings soon to be Bertha towards Louisiana, but the cone of error/uncertainty is rather large.
What if this storm goes on the far southern edge of the cone? That would keep most impacts (wind, rain, surge) well off our coast. I will be following that centerline track (as I have for 50+ years) to see which direction NHC is trending the path of the disturbance. The spaghetti tracks have all shifted towards us with several remaining south of our coast.
That appears to be confirmed by the WPC & NHC rainfall forecasts. WPC is on top.
IF the southern track proves correct, the North Shore will receive little, if any rainfall. The city south of Lake P. might get 1-2" with 4-6" along the coast. The 10-15"+ stays well offshore.
There is a cluster of storms around Mobile this afternoon moving to thew south. We should stay dry today with some storms reaching us as soon as late Monday. I will have a new podcast coming up after the NHC's 4 pm update.
For you to see & hear me, you have to become a subscriber at $2/month. I point out things that you won't find any other place. To find out "What does Bob think?", go sign up now. I'll go over in detail what impacts we could expect depending on the track and what you should be doing tomorrow BEFORE this system arrives. Stay tuned for next podcast!





















