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hurricanetrack wrote:I see that neutral has gained a little more ground for the A/S/O time period. Looks like a decent chance of neutral conditions being present and not much of a chance of a significant El Nino at this point. All of the SOI numbers currently indicate a neutral pattern is in place. For me personally, I keep an eye on that 90 day number. When it gets to -5.0 and lower, start looking for quite a warm up in the tropical Pacific. If it gets to -8.0 and lower, look out! Anchovies will be hard to come by
Ntxw wrote:.NDG wrote:I don't know if I want to use 2009 as an Analog year for 2012.
ENSO in 2009 had a much faster warm up during late April and into May, currently is not doing so, unless it changes during the month of May I am not including 2009 as an Analog year.
2002 fits better.
No two enso's are exactly alike or evolve the exact same way. 2009 is a good longterm analog because of nina-nina-nino. There are few of those so it's included in the pool. Wxman posted a graph somewhere how the enso 3.4 rise and falls for the past year has resembled similarly to the 08-09 frame. However, 09 was forecasting a moderate nino and as of now a weak to maybe moderate nino
hurricanetrack wrote:None the less, we could have 4 to 6 hurricanes and 3 of them hit the U.S. or surrounding islands/countries and have a really bad season. Or, zero could hit which as been more the norm since 2009 than anything. Only one way to find out.
Was it you wxman57 that mentioned something about hurricanes being smaller and perhaps more intense due to the higher pressures? That would be worrisome for folks like our group who will be out in what ever hits this season, if anything. I like my work, but would rather pass on small, intense "Andrew-like" hurricanes. Yuck.
wxman57 wrote:What determines seasonal activity is far more than ENSO. What I think is most important this season is that the Euro is forecast a complete pressure reversal for the Atlantic Basin (when compared to 2010 and 2011). Instead of very low pressure across the Atlantic and high pressure in the East Pacific, the Euro is predicting high pressure in the Tropical Atlantic and quite low pressure in the East Pacific.
This would suggest a very active East Pacific season and limited activity in the Atlantic Basin.
Javlin wrote:I don't like neutral seasons.
ROCK wrote:wxman57 wrote:What determines seasonal activity is far more than ENSO. What I think is most important this season is that the Euro is forecast a complete pressure reversal for the Atlantic Basin (when compared to 2010 and 2011). Instead of very low pressure across the Atlantic and high pressure in the East Pacific, the Euro is predicting high pressure in the Tropical Atlantic and quite low pressure in the East Pacific.
This would suggest a very active East Pacific season and limited activity in the Atlantic Basin.
The EURO has backed off some from its prior forecast....still high pressure but not as strong as before. I look forwad to the next update. Last year we had low pressures across the MDR,Carib and GOM....didnt produce anything that spectacular. Well maybe Irene for awhile...The issue last year is we had stable air all across the ALT for a good part of ASO.
OURAGAN wrote:The soi continues to go up, latest 30 days value -3
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/monitoring/soi30.png
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