Naturally Kiawah Magazine Volume 40 | Page 27

go up to 10,000 to 15,000 feet, it is already freezing. Now add the ocean effect, which acts almost as a cool front with the sea breeze. With the difference of the land in the 90s, the ocean in the 80s, the sea breeze, the atmosphere in the 60s and lower, you start to see this interaction, this instability, kick in. Across most of the southeast, we have an atmosphere that almost cries out for a thunderstorm.” Predictability is a significant difference between the storms we experience on the coast and what most of the rest of the country sees. “In the Lowcountry,” Josh continued, “we know when the conditions for a storm exists, but there is no way of telling for sure whether rain will fall specifically in lower Charleston County or on Kiawah or Seabrook. We don’t have enough detail until the day of the activity. What we can do is look at certain features in the atmosphere, the air temperature, how much moisture is present, how much cool air is aloft. All these variables allow thunderstorms to form. We can see those conditions several days in advance, but these air mass thunderstorms cannot be predicted as easily or accurately as thunderstorms driven by cold fronts. Most of our storms are ‘pop ups.’” When asked about the “Kiawah Umbrella,” Josh laughed. “Mt. Pleasant calls it the Mt. Pleasant Bubble. It’s just the hit-and-miss nature of pop-up storms. You have to remember the sea breeze can push inland before anything can really develop. Over much of June of 2018, we were in a very humid, tropical pattern. During this period the coasts didn’t see much daytime rainfall, but it rained after midnight and into the early morning hours. The reason for that was the sea breeze helped stabilize the air near the coasts, dislocating the unstable atmosphere. At night, this sea breeze would retreat out to the ocean, and our air would become unstable again. What happens is a called a land breeze, where the wind at the lower levels of the atmosphere switches direction and heads back towards the water, which is warmer than the land at that hour. A boundary sets up just along the coasts, and you get those pop-up showers and storms overnight.” As difficult as it is to predict pop-up storms, technology has improved the situation. Computer modeling has been enhanced tremendously, and satellite data has become more refined. “We have a computer model called Triple R (High- Resolution Rapid Refresh Model, or HRRR-H, known as ‘Triple R’ to meteorologists). It runs about 15 hours out, and it has such remarkable resolution that you can actually see these little pop-up storms developing. On the satellite front, NOAA’s GOES-16 has a 1KM resolution and updates every minute. It provided us with images from Irma and Maria beyond anything we could see previously, including individual elements on the sidewalls. It was quite impressive.” Our area has seen its share of storms over the past several years, including the great flood of 2015, Hurricane Matthew, and Hurricane Irma. These are the big newsworthy storms. The more typical storms we contend with are almost daily in nature during the summer. They give much-needed water to our soil, while they also interrupt golf games and outdoor activities. They will be with us regularly, whether meteorologists can predict their exact arrival or not. NK Editor’s Note: Special thanks to Josh Marthers for his comments and insights. Every spring the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) issues their prediction for the coming hurricane season. When asked how much faith we should put into these predictions, Josh Marthers cautioned that the public often misinterprets the numbers. The public’s perception of the severity of a hurricane season focuses more on landfall numbers and damage than on the total number of named storms. “NOAA’s focus is all about the number of storms, not whether they will inflict damage. You can have 25 storms develop in the Atlantic during the season without a single one making landfall, and that’s considered an active storm season. The next year if half that number form, but five of them make landfall, the public thinks of it as an active season, but by NOAA standards it may not be. The best Predicting Hurricanes example is 1992. Hurricane Andrew hit south Florida as a Cat 5 hurricane, but 1992 is considered an inactive year for total storms.” “Overall, I have found NOAA’s predictions to be pretty good when judged against the right criteria.” 25