For what it’s worth, you have accomplished gaining the respect and trust from my husband who has subbed to your channel and has made you his go to for weather news/ information. That my friend says ALOT in this family! Thank you for your hard work and keeping us informed! I’m praying over you and may you be blessed in all your endeavors and future. Well done young man! 🎉
@@eddiebibler1174 It is not very common at all. Nadine formed in the very deep southern part of the Gulf Of Mexico, and crossed over Central America into the Pacific waters and reformed into the next name off the Pacific list. Usually storms that form or travel into the gulf eventually take a north or northeastern turn into the Gulf states, like what happened with Milton and Helene. Its not very common to have a storm continue to take a western track into the Pacific.
So true. Where I live on west coast of U.S. we have wildfires, drought and heatwave so why Floridians shocked each time. The hurricane season is June 1st till November 30th every year. There's a reason it is those dates
@@russell9868 i grew up in cali, living there from 1989 until 2015. I have spoken to career firefighters. The fire outbreaks, and the nature of them, has changed. No more of this arrogant "you should expect it" because it went from one wall of fire in 2015 to dozens in 2016.
@@Purpose_Porpoise That's what happens with climate change. The hot weather is perfect for hurricanes to strengthen. In a few years we'll be getting hurricanes in January too..
A possible hurricane in November? That’s so rare that only 3 hurricanes have hit the US during the month of November since the 1800s. This year’s weather has been scary.
as a person in Kansas, last night, me and my grandmother were in a HUGE thunderstorm, it was so close for noodles but no, it was just a huge thunderstorm, it lasted for 4 hours
It rumbled in my area- SE KS.. but only a trace of moisture in my rain gauge this morning. And it’s very brown. Could use a real thunderstorm. Haven’t had any for months.
I think hurricanes are still on people mind considering the devastation they are still dealing with in the south. Biblical devastation . Very sad and I hope this doesn’t end up being anything anyone has to deal with.
Biblical devastation? Literally the entire planet was flooded in the Bible, since the hurricanes I have a tiny pond in my front yard, not quite biblical unless fish show up
Thank you Max for the updates! I just hope middle TN can finally get some rain without causing major flooding in other places. I believe we're going to have a wet Halloween though.
@allenlikesgeography6465 I'm moving to new Zealand... this country is falling apart while politicians waste billions on campaigns and lobbying and fucking up what should be a happy and simple way of life.
In Tampa here and my wife told me to take our shutters down yesterday and I said I'd get it done this weekend. Does this mean I should hold off? Feels like if I do it, we'll get a direct hit for sure.
I am in Nova Scotia and this morning, it is very windy..its 11 celcius but feeling much colder..looking out my window just now i see 4 large garbage cans that have been blown into the streets..
Max the “Caffeine infused Tornado seeking Squirrel missile”…We are still suffering from post Helene/Milton Hurricane Trauma Syndrome. Be gentle on Florida and the East Coast Appalachian mountain communities…Thanks for what you do Max.
November averages 1 tropical storm per year. Wish this thing would develop and head up the center of country where they need the rain like the Halloween Storm of 1998.
@@michellebatzel5809 Soul Saving Nature 🙌 My wife and I are in our early 50's, her awesome Father passed from cancer in April, prepped our house, Sold. Fell in love many years ago with FL, didn't anticipate life's journey, life is too short not to walk by faith, we made it!!!! God bless
I asked chat gpt what it thought about specific cases related to the new discovery of the ability of sunlight to evaporate water on impact. How it could affect computer models if it’s not accounted for . This is what it said. What do you think about this line of reasoning on the subject? In the specific case of regions like the Bay of Campeche and the narrow Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico, where land separates two major bodies of water, even subtle changes in moisture dynamics can indeed have an outsized effect. Hurricanes in the Bay of Campeche often intensify rapidly because of the warm waters and the unique geography, which can allow storms to maintain or even increase moisture levels as they pass over narrow stretches of land. If this light-driven water vaporization effect does contribute to increased local humidity, it could potentially influence hurricane models in such regions under very specific conditions, especially when: 1. **Intense Solar Radiation**: On particularly clear, hot days, intense sunlight might amplify this effect, slightly raising the humidity over the narrow land area. 2. **Rapidly Intensifying Storms**: A well-developed, fast-moving hurricane might absorb additional localized moisture as it crosses a small land bridge, which could contribute marginally to its intensity. 3. **Narrow, Vulnerable Land Bridges**: Narrow strips of land like the Isthmus of Tehuantepec allow moist air from one body of water to flow over and "feed" a storm on the other side. If the air here is slightly more humid than models predict, it could potentially enhance moisture intake for a storm. ### Potential Effects on Hurricane Modeling and Prediction 1. **Slight Strengthening Beyond Expectations**: In very specific cases, like a hurricane passing from the Pacific to the Bay of Campeche (or vice versa) over a narrow land bridge, a model that doesn’t account for subtle local moisture sources could slightly underpredict the storm’s moisture uptake. This might mean a marginally stronger storm than expected. 2. **Microclimate Influence**: Local effects like enhanced humidity could alter predictions on a small, regional scale, impacting short-term forecasts for intensity or rainfall around landfall points. Over time, repeatedly observing this effect might show small, consistent patterns that could be incorporated into models. However, while it might create some variation, the overall contribution is likely to be modest in the context of hurricane energy sources. The primary factors for storm intensity are still ocean temperature, larger-scale humidity, and atmospheric dynamics, all of which contribute much more substantially than localized light-driven vaporization. But in regions with unique geographic and climatic setups, like the Bay of Campeche, it’s true that even small contributions to moisture can sometimes surprise us in hurricane behavior, especially with rapidly intensifying storms. So while the effect may not lead to drastic changes in hurricane models, further study could still refine short-term predictions in these sensitive regions.
@@jdjones3317 i know it sounds silly at first, but you’ve totally got this all wrong, this is a new discovery by MIT. I’m not talking about bull crap here MIT researchers discovered that light can cause water to evaporate without heat, and that this process is more efficient than heat-driven evaporation. This discovery is called the photomolecular effect, and it occurs when light hits the surface where water and air meet, breaking water molecules away and causing them to float into the air.
I live in Toms River, NJ. There is not one cloud in the sky as far as I can see. Is that normal since we are in a drought? Weather Mod? Someone please let me know.
Meteorology is always a guessing game. He's not making a for-sure prediction, just talking about where they're watching, what they're watching for, and why, not saying anything is gonna develop.