Hurricane Sandra was downgraded to tropical storm status with 50 MPH winds as it approaches the Mexican mainland today.
Sandra has been targeted by microwaves since she became a tropical storm a few days ago - and those microwave blasts prevented a re-run of what happened with hurricane Patricia - developing into a CAT5+ storm with 200+ MPH winds overnight - also in 86F waters.
Sandra is a record breaker; being the latest major (CAT3) storm so late in the season, which officially ends on November 30.
But with very warm ocean temperatures in those Eastern Pacific waters, we could possibly see another storm develop, although currently there is strong high pressure in the Eastern-East Pacific region off Central America where most of the Pacific hurricanes form.
Meanwhile, a dry upper level low pressure system continues to spin over Nevada and California with a HAARP transmitter focused on it; the HAARP-generated high pressure has a dual function currently, and that is to blockade an approaching front and a low weather system heading towards California.
All of this approching moisture is being blocked by the man-made artificial high pressure stationed off the West coast of the U.S. As a result the California drought will continue.
No comments:
Post a Comment