Hurricane Rafael is a major hurricane impacting Cuba and the Florida Keys.
There have been significant forecast changes but none that should impact the US Gulf Coast.
We will have a more extensive update on this a bit later.
Seeing you through the storm
Hurricane Rafael is a major hurricane impacting Cuba and the Florida Keys.
There have been significant forecast changes but none that should impact the US Gulf Coast.
We will have a more extensive update on this a bit later.
Tropical Storm Rafael is on the cusp of hurricane intensity this evening as it bears down on the Cayman Islands. A look at the storm on satellite shows a lopsided but otherwise tidy storm that is clearly on the upswing.
I would anticipate that Rafael becomes a hurricane tonight as it tracks toward Cuba. While further strengthening is likely, the good news today is that models are in decent agreement on there being a functional ceiling for Rafael, probably up around category 2 intensity. That certainly is not meant to minimize the potential impacts to the Caymans and Cuba, but it would be nice to have a storm not do a worst-case scenario thing again. Either way, hurricane conditions are likely tonight for the Cayman Islands, while conditions will deteriorate in Cuba. Heavy rain will continue a bit longer in Jamaica as well before Rafael maneuvers into the Gulf tomorrow night.
Rain totals could exceed 8 inches in spots, particularly the higher terrain of western Cuba. This should produce flash flooding and the potential for mudslides.
Rafael should peak in intensity either before it feels some impacts from Cuban terrain or not long after it moves back into the Gulf of Mexico. From that point on, the combination of dry air and wind shear should begin to enact a weakening trend on Rafael.
You can see how most tropical and operational model guidance supports this weakening trend outcome. From this point of view, I don’t believe that this will deliver any serious impacts to the United States Gulf Coast, but it still is worth watching. The track is less confident, with a wide possibility of options but a weak majority favoring a general path toward Louisiana.
Whatever happens here should not matter much, and in fact it’s even possible that a weaker Rafael meanders in the Gulf until just getting absorbed into a cold front next week. The official NHC forecast has Rafael as a weak tropical storm once near Louisiana.
The moisture out in front of Rafael is another story though. The Florida Keys will see tropical storm conditions likely on the heavier weighted east side of the storm as it passes Cuba. A few tornadoes are possible there as well.
Moisture will link up with a trough on the East Coast as well, spreading heavy rain up into Georgia and South Carolina, again south of areas severely impacted by Helene earlier this season.
Rain totals will be on the order of 3 to 6 inches between Macon, Savannah, Charleston, and Columbia. This won’t cause catastrophic flooding, but it may lead to localized flash flooding in spots. Conditions should improve on Thursday.
Beyond Rafael, there is a slow increase in odds that something may form north of the islands this weekend or next week. For now, I wouldn’t worry a ton about this, but we’ll look at it closer in a day or two if development odds keep increasing.
Apologies for the later than hoped for post today, as today was a busy day at work!
We have run up the ladder since yesterday’s post, going from PTC 18 to TD 18, to now Tropical Storm Rafael. The storm has winds of 45 mph, and it appears to be in an environment that will promote steady, if not rapid intensification over the next 24 to 36 hours.
Model guidance is in good agreement through tomorrow and Wednesday on a track taking Rafael due northwest just west of Jamaica, across the Cayman Islands, and right into western Cuba as healthy hurricane. Tropical storm force winds extend out about 105 miles from the center, so a tropical storm watch has been issued for the Lower and Middle Florida Keys. Hurricane Watches are posted for Cuba, and warnings are posted for the Cayman Islands.
In addition to the tropical storm and hurricane conditions, heavy rain and flooding are a possibility for Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, and Cuba as well. Heavy rain will eventually work into portions of Florida and the Southeast as well as Rafael comes north. More on that in a second.
So where will Rafael go on the other side of Cuba? That’s a tough question right now, as there are several factors in play once the storm gets into the open Gulf of Mexico. Moisture surging out ahead of Rafael will “pre-saturate” the Gulf to make it somewhat more hospitable for the storm to maintain intensity as it comes halfway across the Gulf of Mexico. But once it gets into the northern Gulf, the combination of significant dry air and wind shear may be Rafael’s undoing.
The wind shear is always a bit of a question mark; sometimes as storms come north, the shear can help to actually vent the storm a bit, which can unintentionally cause further strengthening. In this case, I think the shear is too strong, and this ample dry air (and there’s a lot of it) will likely take its toll on Rafael. Because the storm will likely be weakening, it would reason that it should keep going northwest or even west northwest across the Gulf, almost like an aimless wanderer. If Rafael maintains its intensity longer than we anticipate, it could turn more north-northwest toward the Panhandle or the central Gulf Coast. For now, impacts on the Gulf Coast are probably limited to pockets of heavy rain, rough seas, and minor tidal flooding issues. But as with any storm during hurricane season, it makes sense to monitor it closely in the coming days.
In terms of rain, it will be interesting to see how that initial surge of moisture interacts with a cold front approaching the Southeast on Wednesday and Thursday. There are model uncertainties on exactly how this will play out, but it appears that a significant rainfall event may unfold over central Georgia or southern South Carolina. This will be south of the hardest hit areas from Hurricane Helene. But it still means heavy rain and flooding are possible. Right now, the forecast calls for about 3 to 6 inches of rainfall, but some models do drop bullseyes closer to 10 inches in some areas southeast of Atlanta or west of Charleston.
The important takeaway here is that with Rafael expected to weaken due to dry air, there should not be a second surge of rain that follows this like we saw with Helene. So, it’s something to monitor closely in central Georgia and South Carolina, but the hope is that it will be manageable beyond localized issues. We’ll keep an eye on this.
Once Rafael dissipates, that’ll do it. Another area just north of the Caribbean may try to develop in several days, but it’s not a concern right now.
Last week we expected Patty to develop in the Caribbean by today or early this coming week. Patty front ran us all by forming way out in the northeast Atlantic. While that storm is not a land threat right now, what develops in the Caribbean likely will be.
The disturbance has been dubbed Invest 97L for now, and it will likely become a tropical depression or tropical storm tonight or tomorrow. Its first stop on tour will be in Jamaica probably tomorrow afternoon. Tropical storm conditions and torrential rain are a good bet there.
From there, 97L or Rafael will likely continue northwest across Cuba and into the Gulf of Mexico by Wednesday. Once in the Gulf, Rafael’s motion will be dictated by the upper pattern which features weakening high pressure near Florida. This will steer Rafael to the northwest into the open Gulf but as the high falls apart, it’s likely that the motion becomes slower and more erratic. This is why the forecast out 5 to 6 days with respect to likely Rafael’s track is very uncertain.
The good news is that wind shear in the northern and western Gulf is expected to be decent, which should allow for weakening before it does whatever it will do. However, there is a fair bit of uncertainty with all this admittedly. It is November, and you expect November things to happen here normally. But this is not a normal year. The Caribbean remains at near record warm levels, which is to say warmer than normal for any time of year, let alone November.
The Gulf is at near record warm levels for the date as well. So from an ocean support standpoint, this system will have a good bit going for it given the time of year. Could Rafael become a hurricane? Absolutely. Could it ultimately threaten the U.S. Gulf Coast? Certainly, though I would not call that “likely” at the moment, and the most aggressive modeling seems to be the GFS, which has historically had a bit of a tough track record in the autumn in the Gulf. But the bottom line is that this will be a system that merits attention, first in Jamaica, then Cuba, and then for the Gulf Coast. We’ll see where things point tomorrow.
Additional development is possible in the western Atlantic over the next 10 days, but nothing has the robust agreement we see with Invest 97L right now.