tolakram wrote:I've never been a season over predictor, but it looks like winter in the tropics.
We only need cold surges in Central America to feel like winter

Moderator: S2k Moderators
tolakram wrote:I've never been a season over predictor, but it looks like winter in the tropics.
Lifesgud2 wrote:Season is OVER!!! Stop already with this -removed-...Come on guys..I am not a troll, as I spend plenty of time on here and read opinions and forecats which most of the time are very good and educating. Tis the season
Emmett_Brown wrote:Lifesgud2 wrote:Season is OVER!!! Stop already with this -removed-...Come on guys..I am not a troll, as I spend plenty of time on here and read opinions and forecats which most of the time are very good and educating. Tis the season
Nope... you are very wrong about the season being over. A more favorable MJO pulse may be on the way in the next 10 days, and water temps are still quite warm. Shear has ruled the day, but it is still possible for a storm to form if the conditions are right. Besides, that is what this board is for, to discuss the tropics.
Back to the topic at hand, the cmc hasn't been spinning up as many phantom storms this year, so it will be interesting to see if any other models start showing development.
cycloneye wrote:We know the drill regarding long range forecasts so we have to take this GFS scenario with a grain of salt until we see other models joining GFS as the timeframe shrinks.
Western Caribbean development progged by GFS.
Derek Ortt wrote:its an el nino year. No need to worry
jconsor wrote:Derek -
Yes, the upper-level pattern has been behaving very much like a typical El Nino over the eastern Pacific and Caribbean. However, the MJO has exited phase 5 and is now heading for the border between Phases 1 and 8. Based on Philip Klotzbach's recent study of the MJO-Atlantic Hurricane relationship, an average of phases 1 and 8 produces 53% more ACE in the Atlantic than phase 5. The activity in phase 8 is particularly enhanced in the western Caribbean, which is the main favored region for development this time of year according to climatology.
Also, I did a study of Atlantic tropical activity in Oct-Nov during weak El Ninos. Between 1944 and 2009, Weak El Ninos produced on average 2.0 tropical storms, 1.4 hurricanes and 0.0 major hurricanes. Neutral and La Nina years produced an average of 2.7 tropical storms, 1.5 hurricanes and 0.5 major hurricanes.
Also, 8 of the 9 Weak El Nino years since 1944 had at least one hurricane. (The years are 2002, 1994, 1991, 1986, 1977, 1976, 1963, 1957, 1951). Although hurricanes originating in the western Caribbean and Gulf are less common during El Nino events, there have been a few (note that I am counting storms that became tropical storms in the Gulf or Caribbean but did not become hurricanes until reaching the SW Atlantic):
1994 - Gordon
1987 - Floyd
1969- Laurie, Martha
1951 - How, Item
1913- #6
1904- #3
hurricanetrack wrote:Let me see if I understand this correctly.
If we had the GFS showing Andrew in 1992 at several days out, how many people would have said "It is an El Nino year, don't worry"? Seriously?
Besides, who's worried? It's just some maps showing tropical cyclones way out in time. Are there some people trying to suggest that we should not care anymore since it is an El Nino year? We'll see what happens, my bet is that we get another hurricane coming out of the Caribbean before the end of the month and that it will ruin the party for someone- not sure who, but some location could be in trouble if the pattern we are seeing possibly set up verifies.
I just don't get this thought process that the season should remember where it has been when considering where it is going. No such thing.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 25 guests