Hurricane Paula
Editor’s Note: since this article was written Paula has moved from a Tropical Storm to a Category 1 Hurricane. NEMO has discontinued Tropical Storm Warnings for the coast of Belize as of this morning.
Weather Underground | Posted by: Jeff Masters, 7:30 PM GMT on October 11, 2010. Data from the Hurricane Hunters, land stations, and satellite imagery reveal that the strong tropical disturbance centered near the coast of Honduras just west of the border with Nicaragua is now Tropical Storm Paula. Paula is the 16th named storm of the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season. The Hurricane Hunters reported a central pressure of 1001 mb and top surface winds of 45 mph in their 2:11pm EDT center fix.
Satellite imagery shows a well-organized system with a modest but increasing amount of intense thunderstorm activity, and some respectable low-level spiral bands. Water vapor satellite loops reveal that Paula has been able to substantially moisten the atmosphere in the Western Caribbean over the past day, and dry air will be less of an impediment to development than it was yesterday. Wind shear is a moderate 10 – 15 knots. Puerto Lempira, Honduras reported sustained winds of 35 mph at 12pm CST this afternoon, with 3.31″ of rain from the storm thus far.
Proximity to land is hampering Paula’s ability to intensify some, and the storm’s northwest movement of 10 mph will take the center far enough away from the coast of Honduras this evening to substantially increase the storm’s ability to intensify. The latest SHIPS model forecast calls for wind shear to stay mostly in the moderate range, 10 – 15 knots, through Tuesday afternoon, then increase to the high range, 20 – 25 knots, for the remainder of the week. The computer models predict Paula will continue on a northwest motion then turn more north-northwest on Wednesday, which would take the storm close to landfall on the coast of Belize or Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula Tuesday night or Wednesday morning.
At that time, Paula may be approaching Category 2 hurricane status, due to the moderate wind shear, SSTs of 29°C, and a sufficiently moist atmosphere. On Wednesday, there is considerable doubt about the future path of Paula. Steering currents in the Western Caribbean will collapse, potentially allowing Paula to wander in the region for many days, as predicted by the GFS and HWRF models. It is also possible that Paula will push far enough inland over Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula that the storm will dissipate, as predicted by the NOGAPS model. Finally, if Paula grows strong quickly, and pushes far enough north, it could get caught up a strong trough of low pressure predicted to traverse the U.S. this week (and spawn a Nor’easter for New England this weekend.)
In this scenario, offered by the GFDL model, Paula would make a sharp turn to the east-northeast, hit western Cuba, bring tropical storm-force finds to the Florida Keys on Thursday, then move into the Bahama Islands by Friday or Saturday. It is too early to say which of these scenarios is the most likely, as the storm is just forming and the models do not have a good handle on it yet. Regardless, northern Honduras, Belize, and Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula will receive dangerous flooding rains from Paula today through Wednesday.







