I can't resist making a hurricane model overview after those runs.
00z, Oct/22/2026, hurricane model blend, Melissa--- Model peak intensity ---HWRF = 944mb/111kt
HMON = 913mb/135kt
HAFS-A = 901mb/150kt
HAFS-B = 886mb/163kt
--- Hurricane model blend ---Oh boy, this could be a big one. But let's keep things grounded for now and look at the short-term forecasted behavior of Melissa. All of the hurricane models are now trending more west and do not show a Hispaniola landfall anymore. For the coming 48 hours the hurricane models keep Melissa weak at 40 - 50 kt as it battles strong shear. Even within this short time span, however, there is still a big difference in the track between the models. HWRF goes quite far north and is the only model which eventually threads the passage between Jamaica and Cuba, all other models travel south of Cuba. HAFS-A & HAFS-B have even more northern short-term tracks and come relatively close to Hispaniola, but even these models then take a sharp turn SW and show Melissa diving south of Jamaica. Unfortunately, the only way to avoid Melissa becoming a high-end MH seems to be a Jamaica landfall in which case we're probably still looking at a devastating cat 2/3 landfall on a highly populated area. And if it misses Jamaica then Melissa will become even stronger and will landfall somewhere else later in its life. So either way, it seems a lose-lose is becoming a more realistic possibility.
The degree to which Melissa can RI varies slightly between models with HWRF showing high-end cat 3/low-end cat 4, while HMON shows a high-end cat 4 and HAFS-A/B both show a cat 5. HAFS-B even gets this to a Wilma-level intensity. There are way too many moving pieces and uncertainties to ring the cat 5 bell now or anytime soon, but I do think that an outcome like this is a realistic possibility considering the background state. The WCar is basically untouched the entire season and, despite not reaching the record levels of 2023 and 2024, the MDR is still the third-warmest it has been since records started. Also note that all hurricane models still show Melissa intensifying at the end of their runs. Barring any unexpected center relocation shenanigans (which should not be ruled out), it looks like Melissa could be our next MH of the season.
BlendPEAK: 911 mb @ 126 hrs | 134 kt @ 126 hrs
ACE (0 - 126 hrs) = 15.8
Time (hr) / Pressure (mb) / Wind (kt) / Location (lat, lon [deg])
00 / 1000 / 44 / 14.3N, 73.6W
06 / 997 / 44
12 / 995 / 54
18 / 998 / 48 / 14.5N, 73.9W
24 / 998 / 47
30 / 998 / 45
36 / 998 / 45 / 15.4N, 75.4W
42 / 995 / 48
48 / 992 / 50
54 / 990 / 56 / 16.0N, 74.9W
60 / 988 / 59
66 / 983 / 65
- C172 / 976 / 73 / 16.6N, 75.6W
78 / 969 / 82
84 / 962 / 95
- C290 / 952 / 103 / 16.9N, 76.3W
- C396 / 945 / 113
- C4102 / 939 / 116
108 / 931 / 124 / 16.9N, 77.4W
114 / 921 / 129
120 / 916 / 132
126 / 911 / 134 / 17.1N, 78.4W
--- Previous blend analyses ---None yet
Forecast track (weighted average of the hurricane model tracks) 