For instance:
"2027 is going to be an El Nino year! Expect it to be dead and inactive!"
"No no, you can't say that for sure! Remember what happened in 2023?"

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Category5Kaiju wrote:I feel decently sure that in the end, this year is going to be used as a reference year for future Storm2k discussions in future Atlantic hurricane seasons.
For instance:
"2027 is going to be an El Nino year! Expect it to be dead and inactive!"
"No no, you can't say that for sure! Remember what happened in 2023?"
Category5Kaiju wrote:I feel decently sure that in the end, this year is going to be used as a reference year for future Storm2k discussions in future Atlantic hurricane seasons.
For instance:
"2027 is going to be an El Nino year! Expect it to be dead and inactive!"
"No no, you can't say that for sure! Remember what happened in 2023?"
LarryWx wrote:Category5Kaiju wrote:I feel decently sure that in the end, this year is going to be used as a reference year for future Storm2k discussions in future Atlantic hurricane seasons.
For instance:
"2027 is going to be an El Nino year! Expect it to be dead and inactive!"
"No no, you can't say that for sure! Remember what happened in 2023?"
Another realistic possibility:
"2027 is going to have a 2023 strength El Niño (strong) and the Atlantic AMO is as of now as warm as the record warm 2023. Whereas folks had a hard time figuring out 2023 due to the same two conflicting signals, the strong El Niño in 2023 ended up the dominating factor after all with a rather inactive season. So, the best guess is for 2027 to be another typical rather inactive strong El Niño season."
Category5Kaiju wrote:
Pacific
Weapons: Moderate to Strong, east-based El Nino
Weaknesses: Negative PDO
cycloneye wrote:weeniepatrol wrote:DorkyMcDorkface wrote:Still think the Niño will ultimately win out in the end but there is a decent chance that the basin could still put up respectable numbers (or at least more respectable than what we typically see during these events). I've said this before but the eastern and central MDR have the potential to be relatively hospitable if TWs can get going early on (especially if aided by well-timed CCKW/MJO passage). 55W and beyond should be where storms will start encountering problems with shear the further W they track, and the Caribbean should be off-limits as is typical with El Niños, but I guess that goes without saying.
Agree completely, if this nino were going super we could probably expect a standing wave over the Epac that just nukes the Atlantic but with a lesser amplitude and this prolific Atlantic warmth, intraseasonal forcing should be able to make its way through providing windows of development. 3-4 majors is definitely possible. NOAA forecast should be soon.
May 11.
AlanSnyder35 wrote:
It will warm again here starting tomorrow. westerlies are forecast for nearly the next 10 days. Plus Natural warming will start as well soon.
NotSparta wrote:AlanSnyder35 wrote:
It will warm again here starting tomorrow. westerlies are forecast for nearly the next 10 days. Plus Natural warming will start as well soon.
What is "natural warming"?
AlanSnyder35 wrote:NotSparta wrote:AlanSnyder35 wrote:
It will warm again here starting tomorrow. westerlies are forecast for nearly the next 10 days. Plus Natural warming will start as well soon.
What is "natural warming"?
Does it not warm A LITTLE from the Sun Angle as we head farther into Summer ? do believe that is a thing. Obviously somebody an correct me if i'm wrong on this.
AlanSnyder35 wrote:NotSparta wrote:AlanSnyder35 wrote:
It will warm again here starting tomorrow. westerlies are forecast for nearly the next 10 days. Plus Natural warming will start as well soon.
What is "natural warming"?
Does it not warm A LITTLE from the Sun Angle as we head farther into Summer ? do believe that is a thing. Obviously somebody an correct me if i'm wrong on this.
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