WHAT THESE GUYS ARE SAYING NOW WE HAD PREDICTED A WEEK BACK.....THE GUIDING PHILOSOPHY OF OUR SITE IS "WE FORETELL BIG STORMS....................ALWAYS THE FIRST TO DO IT"
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This came on the Accuweather site a few hours ago
Watching For Development In The Indian Ocean 6/8/2014 8:25:13 PM
As of Monday morning, EDT, an area of low pressure was centered about 550 miles southwest of Mumbai, India. Satellite imagery shows persistent deep convection along with a low-level circulation. Also, water temperatures are warm and along with low vertical wind shear, this system may develop into a tropical cyclone within the next 24 hours. If this does develop, the movement of this storm would be to the northwest and towards the coastline of Oman.
By AccuWeather.com Meteorologist John Schneider.
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THE HINDU
This article is a day old and the prediction may seem stale.
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, JUNE 8
The India Met Department has extended by another day the watch for a low-pressure in the Arabian Sea as the monsoon remained struck along the Kozhikode-Coimbatore-Cuddalore alignment on Sunday. Formation of the ‘low’ will cause monsoon flows to rush and converge and, in the process, help push the northern limit along the Karnataka-Goa-Konkan belt on the West coast. To be located in east-central Arabian Sea, the ‘low’ is forecast to rapidly intensify into a cyclone (to be called Nanauk, a name contributed by Myanmar) due to the presence of a very warm pool of waters. This pool extends to the west and north-west towards the Arabian Peninsula, where the system is forecast to head before making a landfall over Oman by Saturday (June 14). A US-based forecaster said the cyclone would be posited equidistant from India’s west coast and Oman on the other side by midnight of Wednesday. Until such time, the monsoon would be active on the west coast. By Thursday, the cyclone may flare up one last time before closing in on Oman coast. Landfall may take place on Friday morning.
------------------------------------------------
This came on the Accuweather site a few hours ago
Watching For Development In The Indian Ocean 6/8/2014 8:25:13 PM
As of Monday morning, EDT, an area of low pressure was centered about 550 miles southwest of Mumbai, India. Satellite imagery shows persistent deep convection along with a low-level circulation. Also, water temperatures are warm and along with low vertical wind shear, this system may develop into a tropical cyclone within the next 24 hours. If this does develop, the movement of this storm would be to the northwest and towards the coastline of Oman.
By AccuWeather.com Meteorologist John Schneider.
--------------------------------
THE HINDU
This article is a day old and the prediction may seem stale.
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, JUNE 8
The India Met Department has extended by another day the watch for a low-pressure in the Arabian Sea as the monsoon remained struck along the Kozhikode-Coimbatore-Cuddalore alignment on Sunday. Formation of the ‘low’ will cause monsoon flows to rush and converge and, in the process, help push the northern limit along the Karnataka-Goa-Konkan belt on the West coast. To be located in east-central Arabian Sea, the ‘low’ is forecast to rapidly intensify into a cyclone (to be called Nanauk, a name contributed by Myanmar) due to the presence of a very warm pool of waters. This pool extends to the west and north-west towards the Arabian Peninsula, where the system is forecast to head before making a landfall over Oman by Saturday (June 14). A US-based forecaster said the cyclone would be posited equidistant from India’s west coast and Oman on the other side by midnight of Wednesday. Until such time, the monsoon would be active on the west coast. By Thursday, the cyclone may flare up one last time before closing in on Oman coast. Landfall may take place on Friday morning.
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