Mikey Gribble
EF5
Yeah amazing things can happen along a boundary, especially in May. I posted about that on my blog how especially with the previous GFS solutions the boundary is oriented just right of storm motions and should be pretty favorably setup for a deviant storm to track down it. That is why I think we'll see a cyclic tornadic supercell coming off the triple point or just south of it. Even if a storm can't turn and get rooted in the boundary, the resident time in the high shear adequate CAPE area will be significant since it is oriented somewhat favorably to storm motions. Still that only accounts for one or two storms tops. A boundary storm is where I see a strong tornado possibility, but I still can't see that justifying a higher end moderate or high risk.
With high CAPE, low LCL's and a boundary there is always going to be significant potential, but there is also a lot of uncertainty that goes along with setups like that. That makes this a very difficult forecast IMO, but I still don't see anything that makes me think this is a good setup for strong tornadoes with any storm that isn't riding the warm front.
With high CAPE, low LCL's and a boundary there is always going to be significant potential, but there is also a lot of uncertainty that goes along with setups like that. That makes this a very difficult forecast IMO, but I still don't see anything that makes me think this is a good setup for strong tornadoes with any storm that isn't riding the warm front.