2010-2019

2000-2009

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USTropics wrote:The area that is showing signs of potentially being favorable later in the season is the Caribbean. 2010-2019 was anomalously void of the typical Caribbean "cruiser". In fact, it doesn't appear any major hurricanes had a traditional track through the western Caribbean. This is a drastic difference from the previous 10 years (2000-2009).
2010-2019
https://i.imgur.com/c2K9JAs.png
2000-2009
https://i.imgur.com/WwrrSLB.png
TheStormExpert wrote:USTropics wrote:The area that is showing signs of potentially being favorable later in the season is the Caribbean. 2010-2019 was anomalously void of the typical Caribbean "cruiser". In fact, it doesn't appear any major hurricanes had a traditional track through the western Caribbean. This is a drastic difference from the previous 10 years (2000-2009).
2010-2019
https://i.imgur.com/c2K9JAs.png
2000-2009
https://i.imgur.com/WwrrSLB.png
The Gulf of Mexico too saw a decent drop in storms and hurricanes outside of the two notable ones such as Harvey in 2017 and Michael in 2018. This right here is why the U.S. during the period of 2010-2016 went untouched from any major hurricane strikes, though Matthew in 2016 came close and Sandy in 2012 was significant though post-tropical.
All in all if we get a west based season similar to or a lot like 2005 or 2008 things could get ugly in terms of U.S. impact especially along the U.S. Gulf Coast.
TheStormExpert wrote:So basically at the moment we have two camps.
Those that believe this season will be average to above average, and those that think this season will be average to below average.
Talk about no consensus on here and the season starts in less than 30 days!
CyclonicFury wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:So basically at the moment we have two camps.
Those that believe this season will be average to above average, and those that think this season will be average to below average.
Talk about no consensus on here and the season starts in less than 30 days!
The vast majority of the predictions on here are calling for above average to well above average activity. Not one expert group is calling for average or below average activity at the moment.
TheStormExpert wrote:So basically at the moment we have two camps.
Those that believe this season will be average to above average, and those that think this season will be average to below average.
Talk about no consensus on here and the season starts in less than 30 days!
aspen wrote:Most of the factors at play for the 2020 season seem to be favorable for above-average activity, but how do the MDR, Caribbean, and Gulf conditions compare to 2017? That season’s ACE was dominated by several long-tracking Cape Verde major hurricanes, so if 2020 could have a similarly favorable MDR, perhaps the same thing could happen this year (although I highly doubt we’ll get something as ridiculous as Irma’s 60+ ACE).
NotSparta wrote:aspen wrote:Most of the factors at play for the 2020 season seem to be favorable for above-average activity, but how do the MDR, Caribbean, and Gulf conditions compare to 2017? That season’s ACE was dominated by several long-tracking Cape Verde major hurricanes, so if 2020 could have a similarly favorable MDR, perhaps the same thing could happen this year (although I highly doubt we’ll get something as ridiculous as Irma’s 60+ ACE).
The MDR is a good bit cooler than in 2017 at this point, as with the Caribbean. Bit early to tell with other conditions but shear looks relatively favorable. Obviously though things are going to look less active than 2017 because that season was hyperactive, and comparing to a hyperactive season will make almost any season seem like it will be inactive
Ubuntwo wrote:NotSparta wrote:aspen wrote:Most of the factors at play for the 2020 season seem to be favorable for above-average activity, but how do the MDR, Caribbean, and Gulf conditions compare to 2017? That season’s ACE was dominated by several long-tracking Cape Verde major hurricanes, so if 2020 could have a similarly favorable MDR, perhaps the same thing could happen this year (although I highly doubt we’ll get something as ridiculous as Irma’s 60+ ACE).
The MDR is a good bit cooler than in 2017 at this point, as with the Caribbean. Bit early to tell with other conditions but shear looks relatively favorable. Obviously though things are going to look less active than 2017 because that season was hyperactive, and comparing to a hyperactive season will make almost any season seem like it will be inactive
Here's the anomaly comparison for now vs. now in 2017 (just a day off)
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/ocean/cdas-sflux_ssta_global_1.png
https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/56530521e4b0c307d59bbe97/1494420088464-ARRDMWXGME1Q3HPII4IL/ke17ZwdGBToddI8pDm48kG4VqDreF-qTqyP-RyQBlzwUqsxRUqqbr1mOJYKfIPR7LoDQ9mXPOjoJoqy81S2I8N_N4V1vUb5AoIIIbLZhVYxCRW4BPu10St3TBAUQYVKcz9FKOkYZZtCaZTQFz_pq4njr3fQnFjhxZuT9qSS4BtKI42iWDYN3Yj3ILGKtJgbC/SST_anom_08_may_2017.png?format=1000w
(Don't know why the resolution is different since it's the same produce, but you can see the differences)
2017 had warmer MDR anomalies, but 2020 has a far warmer GOM
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tolakram wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:So basically at the moment we have two camps.
Those that believe this season will be average to above average, and those that think this season will be average to below average.
Talk about no consensus on here and the season starts in less than 30 days!
Who has been talking about below average?
cycloneye wrote:https://twitter.com/BenNollWeather/status/1258415039532249089
cycloneye wrote:Are there still two camps?
https://twitter.com/AndyHazelton/status/1258462887116488704
https://twitter.com/wxtrackercody/status/1258467054480429056
TheStormExpert wrote:cycloneye wrote:https://twitter.com/BenNollWeather/status/1258415039532249089
The Atlantic is toasty, but mostly in the mid-latitudes between 20-40ºN. Will this change come peak season is the wild card.
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