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Sanibel wrote:Scraping for disturbances out of Africa. The Cape Verde Belt has dried up for now.
But isn't that the main thing, really the only thing. Sure all the predictors were accurate in terms of lower pressures, sst's etc, but all that does is point to the obvious in that we are missing something in considering the seasonal predictions.wxman57 wrote:But still the storms didn't form as expected.
TropicalAnalystwx13 wrote:The red north of 30N is the biggest contributor for why this season has underperformed.
http://i.imgur.com/FiJnbGN.png
TheStormExpert wrote:TropicalAnalystwx13 wrote:The red north of 30N is the biggest contributor for why this season has underperformed.
http://i.imgur.com/FiJnbGN.png
How though? There's still some red in the Tropics though. Also notice the evident blue spot in the BoC from upwelling when Ingrid was meandering around.
TropicalAnalystwx13 wrote:The red north of 30N is the biggest contributor for why this season has underperformed.
http://i.imgur.com/FiJnbGN.png
Andrew92 wrote:The following post is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution or storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to the NHC and NWS products.
OK after doing a little bit of research on years with these warm anomalies in the mid- to higher latitudes, I found twenty years that had similar warm anomalies in the satellite era:
1960
1961
1967
1983
1984
1988
1989
1990
1994
1998
2000
2001
2002
2003
2005
2006
2007
2008
2011
2012
There are a couple of things to take away from these years. The average number of storms to form in the Main Development Region is about four. Five years in this set did see more than five storms form in the Main Development Region: 1989, 1990, 1998, 2000, and 2012. The most active of these years were 1989 and 1998 by a wide margin, with five hurricanes in 1989 and six in 1998 (though one was barely a hurricane in each year). Yet even those two years only managed two majors from these types of storms, although 1998 did also produce Mitch in the Caribbean. 1990 also saw seven storms form there, but only three of them becoming hurricanes with only one barely becoming a major (and one of the ones that became a hurricane was barely one, too). Two MDR storms became major hurricanes in 2000, but also curved further north while the westbound storms fizzled quickly. And out of two MDR storms in 2012, only two became hurricanes at all, neither a major.
The rest of the fifteen years in the dataset - even including 2005 - had little activity in the MDR. Yet only one year had no tropical storms at all in that area, and that was El Nino-laden 1983.
Also, you may have noticed the dataset of 1967, 1984, 1988, 2001, and 2002 pop up at times coming into September of this year. The reason is those years had no hurricanes form until September. Did you also happen to catch that every one of those years met the warm anomalies in the subtropical Atlantic rule that has potentially been discovered? The next time we have no hurricanes before September (a rarity, admittedly), this might be a pretty good indicator to look at, although the sample size is still quite small.
I must note, however, that quite a few of these years also featured a mixture of some cooler waters as well. If I were to name the years most similar to this year of this set, I would say 1960, 2000, and 2001. 1960 saw actually quite warmer anomalies than this year although somewhat more to the south, while 2000 and maybe moreso 2001 look like carbon copies of this year. Storms really struggled to get going in the tropics in all three years, although Donna did still become quite the classical hurricane. The westward moving storms in 2000 and 2001 struggled mightily as a whole, with a few exceptions further west in the Caribbean in Keith, Iris, and Michelle. Some of the quick re-curvers did intensify a little more, most namely Isaac in 2000 but also including Alberto, Erin, and Felix.
This was a rather quick research job and I would be intrigued to learn more but I have simply run out of time for tonight. If there is anything that is telling me about this, I am not sure why storms sometimes struggle in years with warmer waters off New England and/or the Maritimes, but I think our best bet for major hurricane activity will come in October in the Western Caribbean. This is corroborated further when you consider how dry and stable the MDR has been as a whole this year. However, if conditions had been a little more favorable I would say Humberto pulling off become a major briefly on its way out to sea could have a stronger probability. As it stands, that looks quite unlikely, but I can't entirely rule it out.
-Andrew92
gatorcane wrote:Sanibel wrote:Scraping for disturbances out of Africa. The Cape Verde Belt has dried up for now.
Cape Verde season typically winds down around this time of year. I wonder if Humberto will be the last system?
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