Right now, an area of low pressure is developing over the Caribbean Sea.
The low will be slow to move northward and will be in the Bahama's , later this weekend. If named it will be Sandy.
For New England - the weekend looks sunny and mild.
Then next Monday - all of the east coast from North Carolina to New England needs to prepare for a late season, prolonged deluge storm.
Interestingly, the GFS ( a computer model) has a Grace/Perfect Storm set up this morning. With a Nor'easter developing over New England, ingesting the moisture from what could be Sandy.
Although it looks not as mennacing as what will follow, the models keep this low/Sandy spinning off the New England coast for 6 days. This could bring a lot of wind, erosion and more.
A more intense situation lies in several other model outputs showing Sandy tracking up the east Coast. The Nor'Easter still develops, but instead, keeps Sandy as a separate entity and merges the two into a powerful storm over the mid Atlantic and North east next Tuesday into the week.
There are some discussing a similar weather pattern setting up to that of 1954 and the infamous Hurricane Hazel. The initial pattern looks similar, but in this case, Sandy then could get trapped in or just off the Northeast.
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