What Area is at most risk this season?OPINONS WELCOME...
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I have a feeling that southeastern Florida (Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties) will get hit by a major hurricane from the eastern side of the state. If you think about it, these three counties have not seen a major hurricane in quite a while. Frances and Jeanne made landfall in east-central (not southeast) Florida, and only Jeanne was considered a major hurricane at landfall. Wilma dosn't count because it made landfall in southwest Florida and was a Category Two when it went through southeastern Florida. This means that southeast Florida has not yet recently seen a major hurricane. I have a strong feeling that this empty streak is coming to an end because southeastern Florida has usually been hit at least once during active cycles, such as that in the 1940s. The day is coming...
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- Extremeweatherguy
- Category 5
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- Location: Florida
I don't think that anyone should have a "moderate" risk of a Category 5. There have only been 3 Category 5 landfalls in history...so to have places under what would probably be a 50% chance is probably not accurate. The risk levels for Category 5 should go:Hurricane Floyd wrote:heres my risk map
blue = No risk
green = almost no risk
yellow = low risk
Orange = moderate risk
red = high risk
black = extremely high risk
risk for hurricane strike
Just for fun, risk of a cat 5 strike
Blue = Less than a 0.001% chance
Green = Less than a 0.1% chance
Yellow = 1% chance or less
Orange = 5% chance or less
Red = 10% chance or less
Black = 15% chance or less
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- tornadochaser1986
- Tropical Storm
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vbhoutex wrote:I love all this speculation with no reasoning as to why. Anyone care to ante up WHY they think what they are predicting?![]()
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Because the other day it was real windy here and then it hit me...... I saw in my mind a huge storm slamming into the NE coast, then another one into FL and then finally TX......sort of like Final Destination III.....



I just love speculation.....

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Who knows? But it's nice to see about 40% of the posters targeting their specific areas for this year. I guess we'll be playing tug of war over wobbles before long too.
Hey, it's FEBRUARY. NO ONE knows who's most vulnerable (except us here in da bowl). As for who's going to get the most hits, stay tuned to water temperature profiles. Watch in May. Then watch again in June and July. Seems like the largest area where there's reversal from anomalously cold to anomalously warm (sp?) seems to open up an area. We saw that last year along the Gulf Coast.
Also watch the next long wave trough and see where it sets up (in the Bastardi Means), if it is not transient. That's liable to be the last one and should portend either the max or where the high setup will be for the summer (or at least sometimes it does that). If La Nina holds, it will be a trough splitting season meaning a piece could easily peel off into the gulf early on, and if intersected via a wave, could produce something early. But otherwise we just have to wait and see.
Let's put it this way: If Bastardi, Dr. Gray, Gary Grey and Independentwx were unable to hit their landfalls last year, most of you will fail this year
Heh. But I'll be looking at stuff toward April and May. Until then, it's nothing but a crapshoot.
Steve
Hey, it's FEBRUARY. NO ONE knows who's most vulnerable (except us here in da bowl). As for who's going to get the most hits, stay tuned to water temperature profiles. Watch in May. Then watch again in June and July. Seems like the largest area where there's reversal from anomalously cold to anomalously warm (sp?) seems to open up an area. We saw that last year along the Gulf Coast.
Also watch the next long wave trough and see where it sets up (in the Bastardi Means), if it is not transient. That's liable to be the last one and should portend either the max or where the high setup will be for the summer (or at least sometimes it does that). If La Nina holds, it will be a trough splitting season meaning a piece could easily peel off into the gulf early on, and if intersected via a wave, could produce something early. But otherwise we just have to wait and see.
Let's put it this way: If Bastardi, Dr. Gray, Gary Grey and Independentwx were unable to hit their landfalls last year, most of you will fail this year

Heh. But I'll be looking at stuff toward April and May. Until then, it's nothing but a crapshoot.
Steve
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I'm going to say because there appears to be a Azores low...Which has not been really like this sense the 2001/2002 season it could mean more recurvers/fish. Also the Atlantic sst's are cooler. On the other hand if they can get pass the trough La nina should allow for less shear over the central Atlatnic/Caribbean. What I would watch out for is the Gulf of Mexico. The Loop current looks the strongest I'v seen ever. We might get some bombing over the Gulf this year.
So here is my thinking...
If a storm develops slowly intill around 40 to 45 west. Then La nina should faver development.
2# A fast developing cape verde storm will recurve. Not 100 percent remember Isabel.
3# The monsters this year should be over the Gulf of Mexico. Maybe the Western Caribbean.
My numbers are
14 named storms
6 hurricanes
3 Majors
So here is my thinking...
If a storm develops slowly intill around 40 to 45 west. Then La nina should faver development.
2# A fast developing cape verde storm will recurve. Not 100 percent remember Isabel.
3# The monsters this year should be over the Gulf of Mexico. Maybe the Western Caribbean.
My numbers are
14 named storms
6 hurricanes
3 Majors
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