wxman57 wrote:Did a little research on all storms in August/September that have tracked within 65nm of Earl’s current location. There were 40, 8 of which struck the U.S. Only one made it to the Gulf, and only 2 reached the Caribbean.
But there were some quite notable storms among those 8:
Galveston 1915 hurricane
1928 Okeechobee hurricane – hit Puerto Rico as a Cat 5 first, the only Cat 5 ever to hit PR
Great 1938 New England Hurricane
Isabel of 2003
Fran of 1996
Gloria of 1985
Connie in 1955
1893 Long Island Hurricane
That means about 20% of those storms struck the U.S, 2.5% reached the Gulf and 5% reached the Caribbean.
Looking at the 12Z GFS, it takes Earl much farther west before it turns north - between 70W-75W. I think there's a fair chance of such a track. And if it gets that far west then it wouldn't take much for it to hit the U.S. Mid Atlantic Coast or southern New England.
Thanks for putting this together. While I know we may not rely solely on climatology for predictions I think it helps put things into perspective by looking at the broader picture. Please keep this up because I'm paying attention!
