Storm Track Widely Unknown!


First off, my thoughts and prayers are with people who have lost their family members and their homes in the 7.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti Tuesday night. We, Canada have stood by you from the very beginning and we will not abandon you now in hard times like these! Your sorrows are our sorrows and your grief will be shared by all Canadians. God bless.

The storm for the weekend is still as uncertain as it was a couple of days ago. Some models have several high pressure systems suppressing the storm as it tries to leave the Gulf of Mexico. These high pressure systems try to push this storm out to sea and it eventually ends up working. I have named this track, Track B.

The other possibility is that the storm does override these high pressure systems and tries to make it to the Ohio Valley. Yet in this track it still ends up being suppressed by a high pressure system that is hovering the Ontario/Quebec border. It ends up steering the storm out to sea. We will call this track, Track A. Now these are tracks that the models are predicting, yet we all know how unreliable these models are in predicting storm tracks. So this is why I say things are still uncertain. Both of these tracks could still be false and we could be surprised yet. Your best idea is to keep checking back. I will update this blog as things change.

One last note....
If it takes Track A then some areas of the Northeast would see a moderate snowfall setup, however Southern Ontario would not be included. If it takes Track B then all areas would see rain, and the North East would be calm, cold, and possibly sunny.

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