Low Pressure Slowly Sliding South Over Florida
Posted by Jeff Gammons on 21 Jun 2007 at 10:54 am
Tagged as: Florida Weather
Once again, yesterday was one of the those weird days where your expecting some good storms, but then everything holds and you get just some garden type storms in a feeder band like featured extending from the weak low pressure over northeast Florida. Warmer temps in the mid-levels and moisture mixing out some yesterday, kept storms from getting to strong.
Today, per visible satellite imagery, the surface weak area of low pressures is slowly drifting south-southwestward towards north-central Florida. A band moved through here overnight with some heavy rains and lightning and another one looks to be moving through in the next hour. Still looks like much of the state is receiving some good daytime heating, and expect more thunderstorms, some strong , to be more widespread over the eastern half of the state. The east coast sea breeze should be pinned to the coast more today as the southwest flow is a little stronger, and the west coast sea breeze boundary should move well inland today helping with convergence.
I’m not really sure what I’m doing today, but I’ll be out on the road watching any developments. At least the state of Florida continues to receive drought welcomed rains. Lets hope it continues. The tropics need to get busy!

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