tolakram wrote:I've said before I don't see the value in landfall predictions. You could have a season denoted by troughs pulling every system out to sea, then by chance one storm develops that gets caught by a fleeting ridge and hits land. Timing, as they say, is everything. Seems to me the only thing a low landfall risk forecast could do is decrease the number of people who are prepared for a surprise event, like an Andrew.
As far as this season goes, we can complain the forecasts are a bust, but by claiming the season is a bust we are making the very forecast that we say can't be made. Good luck with that.![]()
If the experts are confused as to why the season has been a bust so far then I am confused as well. I think it's extremely foolish and ignorant to think any of us amateurs can, with the help of the mighty interweb, see things scientists and forecasters who do this for a living could not.
herd mentality. once one organization forecasts a big season others fall in line and start looking for reasons it will be active. there should have been one pro, or group that forecast a slow season.