Retire Fabian
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Retire Fabian
I know Fabian wasn't as strong as Andrew or Mitch when he blasted Bermuda... but I really think the NHC should give consideration to retiring that name. It did a heaping load of damage to the island..
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- Stormsfury
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JetMaxx wrote:Fabian will definitely be retired....all landfalling major Atlantic hurricanes are -- regardless of whether landfall occurred on the U.S. or not (why there will never be another Roxanne, Lenny, or Marilyn).
IMHO, Fabian will be retired and should be ...
Criteria for a storm retirement are as follows:
1) Very deadly
2) Very damaging
3) Very memorable as to which it will be talked about and remembered for generations (and not to be confused with other storms bearing of the same name)
I'm definitely hoping criteria #1 isn't met, but based on the impact that Fabian has wrought upon Bermuda, the storm qualifies #2 and #3 in my book.
SF
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- Andrew92
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Bret hit a very unpopulated area in Texas, very undeveloped. I agree that just because a storm is a Cat. 3 doesn't get it retired, it still has to do the damage, and Bret didn't do it.
I think Fabian has done enough damage in Bermuda to warrant retirement of the name. If that's right, in 2009, watch out for Hurricane Forrest! (not to be confused with the 1983 typhoon
)
-Andrew92
I think Fabian has done enough damage in Bermuda to warrant retirement of the name. If that's right, in 2009, watch out for Hurricane Forrest! (not to be confused with the 1983 typhoon

-Andrew92
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OtherHD wrote:
Bret hit south Texas as a Cat 3 and was not retired.
I haven't checked the name list for 2005, but Bret should have been retired. If not, either someone at NHC (or NOAA) goofed, or they've changed the criteria for retiring names since Dr Neil Frank was NHC Director....he's the gentleman who told me all landfalling majors were retired (when I visited NHC in the early 80's).
I'm certain Fabian will be retired....the most intense hurricane to strike Bermuda in half-century...PLUS there are several fatalities and major damage.
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- charleston_hugo_veteran
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- AussieMark
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Bret hit the most unpopulated stretch of the US coastline in central Padre Island.
If Bret hit a few miles to the north Corpus Christi would have been under his radar asnd that landfall would have been Category 3 or if he hit a few miles to the south that would have brough him it at Brownsville possibly as a category 4 hurricane. So in reality Bret was a lucky storm, imagine if he hit a few miles north or south of where he hit.
Remember Lili from last year was Lili retired because of the combined effects from Isidore and Lili (like Connie and Diane in 1955)
If Bret hit a few miles to the north Corpus Christi would have been under his radar asnd that landfall would have been Category 3 or if he hit a few miles to the south that would have brough him it at Brownsville possibly as a category 4 hurricane. So in reality Bret was a lucky storm, imagine if he hit a few miles north or south of where he hit.
Remember Lili from last year was Lili retired because of the combined effects from Isidore and Lili (like Connie and Diane in 1955)
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- wxman57
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Bret
Bret actually struck south Texas as a Cat 4 with 125 kt sustained wind and 944mb pressure. As far as I can tell, Bret was not retired. It was a very small, yet powerful storm. But it didn't hit anything but a wide-open King Ranch.
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- AussieMark
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Storm Names
I think the NHC needs to consider letting us pick some of the names.. It gets boring seeing the same old names.. especially terrible names or ones we can't pronounce
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Retire Fabian??
One would consider that as a possibility. It was mainly a fish storm, yet it was the strongest hurricane to hit Bermuda in 50 years. Edna was the last category 3 hurricane to directly hit Bermuda back in 1953. So right there, that's a significant development and one worth considering. Bret hit the least populated coastal county along the US gulf and east coast, Kennedy County, TX.
Jim
Jim
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