![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRAXo3mUFKWqo47PfKd80NlOuBpC2AmuI5AOquyC6Lf7naHyohC3d6URrcQU5OCjSVIk55k7e9oK4e0jp87ChaZb1Ee26iSObUnHhStH2WDvtNXfEOJ_WArYwI8lUj_DeyyIHJyUsw5lNx/s280/TD-3e.gif)
This isn’t looking like much of a swell maker for anyone, but definitely not for Southern California at this point…the storm is just too far away from our swell window.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh87Zcb2esrlnSfhFtU_WSprvkpH6913-YiEha7kMSGe9K4BoSAUVvaoX6bTAHCL7vR51u9oO7_u2ZsJOgTLQ0vrcWQFPuO3fXSU230DaXqY0uuwd4JKmXhIwFbhvRdV3pdnazsvB9bzaJ-/s280/CIMSS_TD-3_(TD-Blas).jpg)
Current forecasts aren’t calling for this system to get much over 35-knots, which is the minimum threshold that a storm can maintain and still be called a “Tropical Storm”. The long-range does show this storm pushing into our SE-S swell window in a few days…maybe it will set up a little fetch as it tracks into a better position…we will have to wait and see.
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