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Florida1118 wrote::uarrow: Its what makes weather funThe guessing.
cycloneye wrote:Florida1118 wrote::uarrow: Its what makes weather funThe guessing.
And that is why tropical weather is facinating to follow as they change constantly. There is that saying "never say never in the tropics."
AHS2011 wrote:Does anyone know if we are at the same pace of the 2005 season? But obviously less intense.
AHS2011 wrote:Does anyone know if we are at the same pace of the 2005 season? But obviously less intense.
JTE50 wrote:cycloneye wrote:Florida1118 wrote::uarrow: Its what makes weather funThe guessing.
And that is why tropical weather is facinating to follow as they change constantly. There is that saying "never say never in the tropics."
Indeed. I wonder how you would forecast a track like Elena in 1985 which targeted near Pensacola, turned toward Cedar Key, where it stalled and did a loop, then skirted the coast enroute to hitting Biloxi, MS. Weather is fascinating and just when you think you have it figured out - you realized you haven't seen everything yet and never will.
CrazyC83 wrote:This season is developing a 2006-ish feel in my mind...at least so far...
HurrMark wrote:Here is an interesting factoid...assuming Bret and Cindy don't do something completely unexpected and turn back towards the US (you probably have a better chance winning the lottery and getting struck by lightning the same day), we would have gone 20 consecutive storms, going back to last year, without one making landfall the US mainland (Hermine did impact Texas, but technically it was a Mexican landfall). The last one to do so was Bonnie. I wonder if this is a record...anyone have an idea?
plasticup wrote:HurrMark wrote:Here is an interesting factoid...assuming Bret and Cindy don't do something completely unexpected and turn back towards the US (you probably have a better chance winning the lottery and getting struck by lightning the same day), we would have gone 20 consecutive storms, going back to last year, without one making landfall the US mainland (Hermine did impact Texas, but technically it was a Mexican landfall). The last one to do so was Bonnie. I wonder if this is a record...anyone have an idea?
I have some friends who work in reinsurance and they are having a really hard time. When you get a big stretch like this without serious impacts people start to wonder why they are even buying insurance. They forget so quickly and the market gets soft...
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