Just an update, I'm cancelling the season for the United States based on gfs progs strong westerly flow at 200 mb seeming to dominate, oh, just most of the Atlantic north 20-23 N run after run for almost the entire prognosticated 16-day period. A terrible, high-amplitude phase of the MJO doesn't help either. Climatology plays a role as well given that if a more favorable phase of the MJO roles around, it may be November by that time. And, the probability of U.S. tc strikes decreases dramatically at that point.
I'm still not wild about a ridiculously active late season, primarily because of the all-but-strong Nina (at least using the MEI as a proxy for Nina strength) as well as the negative PDO. Honestly, if you ignore the warm phase of the AMO, 1975 is not a horrible analog based on these factors. 1975 produced two tropical or subtropical cyclones after October 1. Toss in +AMO, and I'm still okay with 3/1/0 sometime between now and December 31. I could see 4/1/0 or mabye 4/2/0 if the thing in the Caribbean materializes
Needless to say, I'm not wild about ripping Ninas and late season activity. Look at years like 1955, 2007, 1975. None produced much. 1988 and 1954 did, but from the UW dataset, the North Pacific was in a very different state those seasons.
MEI TimeseriesPDO TimeseriesI usually hate index forecasting, but I'm really bored, so whee.
And before someone says Katie of 1955 was a major hurricane, note that the peak intensity prior to landfall in Haiti was 984 mb/100 knots. A really small rmw and/or really high environmental pressures would be necessary for that. The latter seems unlikely given the track, and I just don't think the former occurred.
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