I'm not sure why I just caught myself up on the last four pages of this thread.

Some thoughts:
Hammy said a bunch of things I would have said. Complete agreement here, you always make great posts. 3 hurricanes is less boring than 2 hurricanes. Additionally, we already knew 2014 would be slow. When Arthur formed, I knew there was a very good chance that it would be the highlight of the season. It probably was, I hope everybody remembered to savor it.

90L, 91L, and 92L would all likely be named storms (probably hurricanes) by now if they werent so starved for moisture, but this season has been very dry outside of the temporary MJO/CCKW pulses and I think expecting anything outside of those pulses is as silly as expecting something in April.
The CCKW (we use a lot of technical acronyms, in layman's terms it's a region of rising air and increased moisture) is coming back to the Western Atlantic and it should produce a lot of potential development candidates, and a few of them ought to spin up into named storms before the CCKW moves away toward the east. This will be our last real shot until it likely returns in October.
"Just wait until peak season" is actually very sound advice. Even 2013 had its' lone two hurricanes around this timeframe. Same with 1997 2006 and 2009. We will have a hurricane or two in September.
I'm not so sure that 2015 will be any busier, because El Niño could persist into that summer. 2016 will be busy for sure though. The active period is interrupted, but not over. I'm estimating 50% another slow season, 25% average and 25% above average for 2015, because El Niño could either be dominant, or lift out in such a way that it puts the Atlantic into an unexpected hypermode for a relatively brief time period like the 2004 El Niño did, or it could just go La Niña and produce an extended bunch of activity.
For that matter I think the slowness of slow periods is overexaggerated. The last slow period (70s, 80s) had a BUNCH of major hurricane landfalls despite being bookended by slow seasons.