2008 Cyclones Retirement
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
This may give some perspective on the name retirememt criteria...
1996's Hurricane Bertha: A Major Category 3 Hurricane that crossed the Leeward Islands and passed near Puerto Rico, later making landfall in North Carolina as a Category 2 storm, causing $270 million in damage to the United States and its possessions and many indirect deaths.
Bertha was not retired in '96.
1996's Hurricane Bertha: A Major Category 3 Hurricane that crossed the Leeward Islands and passed near Puerto Rico, later making landfall in North Carolina as a Category 2 storm, causing $270 million in damage to the United States and its possessions and many indirect deaths.
Bertha was not retired in '96.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
I would have thought that based on the 'intimidating factor' of certain names, Ike wouldn't have had to fight the 'just a cat 2' saga as much as he did...i mean, we are talking about a name that immediately is associated with one of the most infamous and publicized wife beater's of all time...ike turner.
The point of naming storms is not really to instill fear...the storm's strength should be able to do that...plus it is not like we name blizzards, tornadoes, or even earthquakes.
The point of naming storms is not really to instill fear...the storm's strength should be able to do that...plus it is not like we name blizzards, tornadoes, or even earthquakes.
Calasanjy wrote:Dolly has as much chance of being retired as Notre Dame does of winning the national championship this season
Well, the latter's definitely not going to happen, however there's always the outside chance that Guatemala could request retirement of Dolly. However, next year will be the current list's thirtieth year of existence, isn't it wearing out its welcome?
Anyway - possible replacement names for those Atlantic names which may be retired:
Replace Dolly by Dita/Drusilla (something mean-sounding)/Damienne/Dharla
Replace Gustav by Geraldo/Ghislain/Giovanni/Guillaume
Replace Hanna by Heidi/Hestia/Honora/Hildegarde (again to sound intimidating)
Replace Ike by Ichabod (very intimidating)/Ira/Icarus/Illbert (hah, best fourth "I" option I could think of)
Replace Omar by Odilo (i.e. Globocnik)/Omri/Olaf/Osama (fat chance)
Replace Paloma by Puricima/Pitina/Pepita/Pia (had to search for some Hispanic girls' names)
There should be more truly fearsome names, like ones associated with malefactors, on these lists IMHO.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
jinftl wrote:This may give some perspective on the name retirememt criteria...
1996's Hurricane Bertha: A Major Category 3 Hurricane that crossed the Leeward Islands and passed near Puerto Rico, later making landfall in North Carolina as a Category 2 storm, causing $270 million in damage to the United States and its possessions and many indirect deaths.
Bertha was not retired in '96.
In terms of perspective, it sounds good, but there's more to think of. For instance, some names that are retired regardless of basin (Sudal in WPac and Klaus in Atl) with low damage totals. However, the reason they are retired is that those totals represent damage to the economic infrastructure of where they hit. Like Sudal. According to the NCDC report, Sudal was responsible for $14 million in damage, which is kind of paltry for damage total, but this was mostly on Yap, which was essentially crippled by it. In some countries, what the US considers $14 million might equate as $14 billion in the other country. Another example of retired names that went against the rule are some cases of EPac names. In the record, Ioke, Paka, Kenna, and Iwa are examples of retired names, but at this same level, names that did nothing, like Adele or Knut, were also retired. Another reason, as given by the WMO, is if a name is "socially unacceptable" in a different language. 1978's Fico, from what I heard, met this fate (although it did hit land, Hawaii). Knut, likely, also was retired for this very reason (given the implications the name suggests should it be pronounced with a silent K). So from what I see, here's a list of retirement/removal reasons (blue is Atl, red is EPac, green CPac, and orange WPac:
-High death tolls (Fifi, Diana, Flora)
-High damage in regards to country economy (Klaus, Sudal)
-Both the above (Mitch, Camille, Katrina, Durian)
-Socially unacceptable meaning in a different language (Knut+, Fico)
-Record breaking (Vamei++, Ioke)
-Political sensitivities (Israel, Adolph)
-Socially sensitive (Hanuman*, Frances**)
-Misspelling (Changmi>Jangmi, Noguri>Neoguri, Ramasoon>Rammasun)
-Culturally or linguistically insignificant (Ioke^)
-Name change (Hali, Li)
-Other (Yanyan^^, Tingting#, Kodo, Adele)
+Just my idea on it.
++Lowest forming tropical cyclone in terms of latitude.
*The India Meteorological Department objected to Hanuman due to religious reasons.
**Following a request by France during the 03 session, the WMO planned to retire the name Frances after 04, but the hurricane's effects were cause alone for retirement.
^According to a note Hurricanehink on Wikipedia got in regards to Hawaiian retirements:
"Ioke was retired because it was such a significant system, but also because it was an incorrect Hawaiian word. So you can
considered it retired, but it would have been removed if it hadn't been retired because it had no Hawaiian meaning."
^^The original replacement for this name was "Taichi", but due to a socially unacceptable meaning, Dolphin was used.
#Like Yanyan, the original name to replace this one, Kapok, also had a socially unacceptable meaning, leading to Lionrock being the replacement. Unlike Yanyan, Tingting affected land and was one of Guam's wettest tropical cyclones.
Of these names, three (Israel, Hanuman, and Kodo, though some of the misspelled WPac names may have been as well) were replaced before being used, but were on names lists, and four others (Vamei, Fico, Tingting, and Ioke) were retired for reasons other than damage where they hit (though Fico may be different). In addition, one (Paka) was retired nine years after the cyclone formed for damages (the cyclone was in 1997, the name was retired in 2006) and three others (Carol, Edna, and Janet) were retroactively retired.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
I sympathize with the idea that "intimidating" names should be chosen for storms. But I think the main criterion should still be "short and easy to pronounce", so I wouldn't like to see Hildegarde as a hurricane name.
But of course the main difficulty with using "intimidating" as a criterion is that different cultures, and even different generations within a culture, have very different associations to the same name. Personally I was amazed that a previous poster's first association to Ike was to a "wife beater"; in spite of his being President when I was in early elementary school, I still think of Eisenhower, not Turner, as my first association with Ike. So it seems like a friendly sort of nickname to me.
And it's hard for me to see Ichabod as being intimidating. To me Ichabod Crane is just the opposite, a person who is easily intimidated. Ichabod sounds silly, not dangerous, to me personally.
Even some common names have different associations in different cultures. I think that most Americans still consider Eric to be a fairly macho-sounding Viking-like name. In England, many people think of Eric as a namby pamby name, like Cedric, because of a children's book formerly popular in Britain called Eric, or Little by Little. George Orwell, whose real name was Eric Blair, was famously quoted as saying that being named Eric had almost "ruined" him, which is hard for Americans to understand. It would be interesting to find out whether the American or English association would be stronger in the English-speaking Caribbean.
But of course the main difficulty with using "intimidating" as a criterion is that different cultures, and even different generations within a culture, have very different associations to the same name. Personally I was amazed that a previous poster's first association to Ike was to a "wife beater"; in spite of his being President when I was in early elementary school, I still think of Eisenhower, not Turner, as my first association with Ike. So it seems like a friendly sort of nickname to me.
And it's hard for me to see Ichabod as being intimidating. To me Ichabod Crane is just the opposite, a person who is easily intimidated. Ichabod sounds silly, not dangerous, to me personally.
Even some common names have different associations in different cultures. I think that most Americans still consider Eric to be a fairly macho-sounding Viking-like name. In England, many people think of Eric as a namby pamby name, like Cedric, because of a children's book formerly popular in Britain called Eric, or Little by Little. George Orwell, whose real name was Eric Blair, was famously quoted as saying that being named Eric had almost "ruined" him, which is hard for Americans to understand. It would be interesting to find out whether the American or English association would be stronger in the English-speaking Caribbean.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
With the season over (barring a December surprise), here is my estimates for likelihood for retirement:
Arthur
Case for retirement: Not much of one, although it did a bit of damage in Mexico and Belize
Case against retirement: Weak, overall modest damage, relatively low death toll
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:
Bertha
Case for retirement: Record-setting July storm
Case against retirement: No significant land impacts
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:
Cristobal
Case for retirement: No real case, apart from touching land
Case against retirement: No deaths or significant damage
Chance of being retired: 2%
My verdict:
Dolly
Case for retirement: Fairly high damage total (although incomplete)
Case against retirement: Death toll mostly due to fringe effects, much of the damage was to crops
Chance of being retired: 25%
My verdict:
Edouard
Case for retirement: No real case, although it did make landfall
Case against retirement: Minimal damage, no deaths on land
Chance of being retired: 2%
My verdict:
Fay
Case for retirement: Persistent rainmaker, fairly significant death toll
Case against retirement: Never a hurricane, no real catastrophic damage anywhere
Chance of being retired: 20%
My verdict:
Gustav
Case for retirement: High death toll, very significant damage in 4 countries (especially Cuba and the US)
Case against retirement: Not much of one
Chance of being retired: 95%
My verdict:
Hanna
Case for retirement: Very high death toll, significant flood damage in Haiti
Case against retirement: Most of the damage was in Haiti, which has a poor record on retiring names
Chance of being retired: 60%
My verdict:
Ike
Case for retirement: High death toll, 3rd costliest storm, very destructive in both Cuba and the US with major damage in Haiti, Jamaica and the Turks and Caicos
Case against retirement: Not much of one
Chance of being retired: 97%
My verdict:
Josephine
Case for retirement: None
Case against retirement: No damage or casualties, only minimal land effects
Chance of being retired: <2%
My verdict:
Kyle
Case for retirement: Some damage in the Caribbean before becoming a storm, and some in Canada
Case against retirement: No deaths while a storm, overall damage not significant
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:
Laura
Case for retirement: None
Case against retirement: Never impacted land
Chance of being retired: <2%
My verdict:
Marco
Case for retirement: Record-setting storm for size
Case against retirement: No significant damage and no deaths
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:
Nana
Case for retirement: Are you kidding???
Case against retirement: Never impacted land
Chance of being retired: <2%
My verdict:
Omar
Case for retirement: Intense storm as it passed the Leewards
Case against retirement: Damage and casualties fairly low, worst of storm remained over water
Chance of being retired: 15%
My verdict:
Paloma
Case for retirement: Severe damage, very strong storm in both the Caymans and Cuba
Case against retirement: Low death toll
Chance of being retired: 55%
My verdict:
In a nutshell, Gustav and Ike are almost certainly going to be retired. I think Hanna and Paloma have a good shot at retirement, but it is not guaranteed by any means. Dolly, Fay and Omar have an outside chance.
Arthur
Case for retirement: Not much of one, although it did a bit of damage in Mexico and Belize
Case against retirement: Weak, overall modest damage, relatively low death toll
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:

Bertha
Case for retirement: Record-setting July storm
Case against retirement: No significant land impacts
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:

Cristobal
Case for retirement: No real case, apart from touching land
Case against retirement: No deaths or significant damage
Chance of being retired: 2%
My verdict:

Dolly
Case for retirement: Fairly high damage total (although incomplete)
Case against retirement: Death toll mostly due to fringe effects, much of the damage was to crops
Chance of being retired: 25%
My verdict:

Edouard
Case for retirement: No real case, although it did make landfall
Case against retirement: Minimal damage, no deaths on land
Chance of being retired: 2%
My verdict:

Fay
Case for retirement: Persistent rainmaker, fairly significant death toll
Case against retirement: Never a hurricane, no real catastrophic damage anywhere
Chance of being retired: 20%
My verdict:

Gustav
Case for retirement: High death toll, very significant damage in 4 countries (especially Cuba and the US)
Case against retirement: Not much of one
Chance of being retired: 95%
My verdict:

Hanna
Case for retirement: Very high death toll, significant flood damage in Haiti
Case against retirement: Most of the damage was in Haiti, which has a poor record on retiring names
Chance of being retired: 60%
My verdict:

Ike
Case for retirement: High death toll, 3rd costliest storm, very destructive in both Cuba and the US with major damage in Haiti, Jamaica and the Turks and Caicos
Case against retirement: Not much of one
Chance of being retired: 97%
My verdict:

Josephine
Case for retirement: None
Case against retirement: No damage or casualties, only minimal land effects
Chance of being retired: <2%
My verdict:

Kyle
Case for retirement: Some damage in the Caribbean before becoming a storm, and some in Canada
Case against retirement: No deaths while a storm, overall damage not significant
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:

Laura
Case for retirement: None
Case against retirement: Never impacted land
Chance of being retired: <2%
My verdict:

Marco
Case for retirement: Record-setting storm for size
Case against retirement: No significant damage and no deaths
Chance of being retired: 3%
My verdict:

Nana
Case for retirement: Are you kidding???
Case against retirement: Never impacted land
Chance of being retired: <2%
My verdict:

Omar
Case for retirement: Intense storm as it passed the Leewards
Case against retirement: Damage and casualties fairly low, worst of storm remained over water
Chance of being retired: 15%
My verdict:

Paloma
Case for retirement: Severe damage, very strong storm in both the Caymans and Cuba
Case against retirement: Low death toll
Chance of being retired: 55%
My verdict:

In a nutshell, Gustav and Ike are almost certainly going to be retired. I think Hanna and Paloma have a good shot at retirement, but it is not guaranteed by any means. Dolly, Fay and Omar have an outside chance.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
The seasonal summary said Fay had 178 million so it won't be retired
Paloma will be retired, more than a billion so definite
If Dolly's damage total is right, then probable yes
Hanna has to be retired for it killed 530 people.
Paloma will be retired, more than a billion so definite
If Dolly's damage total is right, then probable yes
Hanna has to be retired for it killed 530 people.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
Phoenix's Song wrote:The seasonal summary said Fay had 178 million so it won't be retired
Paloma will be retired, more than a billion so definite
If Dolly's damage total is right, then probable yes
Hanna has to be retired for it killed 530 people.
Pardon me for being nebby, but which season summary said $178 million for Fay?
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
That $178 million figure was from Wikipedia, which I personally found using data from NCDC. It might be changed, but that's the best guess for now.
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My suggestion for replacement names (I know most will not be used by any means, but they are just there):
Arthur -> Anthony
Bertha -> Brianna
Cristobal -> Corbin
Dolly -> Dawn
Edouard -> Etienne
Fay -> Felicite
Gustav -> Galeno
Hanna -> Heather
Ike -> Ingram
Josephine -> Jolene
Kyle -> Kimball
Laura -> Leah
Marco -> Mateo
Nana -> Neva
Omar -> Orville
Paloma -> Penny
Arthur -> Anthony
Bertha -> Brianna
Cristobal -> Corbin
Dolly -> Dawn
Edouard -> Etienne
Fay -> Felicite
Gustav -> Galeno
Hanna -> Heather
Ike -> Ingram
Josephine -> Jolene
Kyle -> Kimball
Laura -> Leah
Marco -> Mateo
Nana -> Neva
Omar -> Orville
Paloma -> Penny
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
My ideas for retired names? (This is all I view as having chances. First is my first choice, followed by secondaries):
-Dolly > Daphne (Darla, Daisy)
-Fay > Farah (Felice, Fina)
-Gustav > Guy (Gary, Geoff)
-Hanna > Helga (Holly)
-Ike > Irving (Irv, Ingmar)
-Omar > Octavio (Orson, Opie)
-Paloma > Pia (Pepita, Pamela)
-Dolly > Daphne (Darla, Daisy)
-Fay > Farah (Felice, Fina)
-Gustav > Guy (Gary, Geoff)
-Hanna > Helga (Holly)
-Ike > Irving (Irv, Ingmar)
-Omar > Octavio (Orson, Opie)
-Paloma > Pia (Pepita, Pamela)
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Re:
Derek Ortt wrote:keep in mind you must replace spanish names with spanish names, etc
That doesn't seem to always happen lately:
2002 - Isidore -> Ike (S to E)
2002 - Lili -> Laura (E to E)
2003 - Fabian -> Fred (E to E)
2003 - Isabel -> Ida (E to E)
2003 - Juan -> Joaquin (S to S)
2004 - Charley -> Colin (E to E)
2004 - Frances -> Fiona (E to E)
2004 - Ivan -> Igor (S to E)
2004 - Jeanne -> Julia (F to E)
2005 - Dennis -> Don (E to E)
2005 - Katrina -> Katia (E to E)
2005 - Rita -> Rina (E to E)
2005 - Stan -> Sean (E to E)
2005 - Wilma -> Whitney (E to E)
2007 - Dean -> Dorian (E to E)
2007 - Felix -> Fernand (F to F)
2007 - Noel -> Nestor (F to S)
I did try to keep the same ethnicity, but in some cases (i.e. Paloma) that may be really difficult.
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Re: 2008 Cyclones Retirement
Igor's a Russian name. It may be popular in Spanish-language countries, but both it and Julia are borrowed.
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