#6 Postby Hammy » Wed May 03, 2017 10:14 pm
Cuba got in the way in 2008--both Gustav and Ike, which were 110 at landfall, never recovered from the circulation disruption after crossing the island. Other than that, the Gulf has been less than favorable for quite some time, and the few stronger hurricanes that have formed in the Gulf went west into Mexico.
That said, most of the major hurricanes that have hit the US over the last 40 or so years have been lower-end Cat 3 hurricanes that were either weakening on the way to the coast, or formed too close to the coast to strengthen more--this includes most of the ones of 2004-05. For example, Charley in 2004 was the only Cat 4 to hit the US. So for the most part, it's a matter of a
5 mph difference that's led to the major hurricane drought, and some of the ones that were Cat 3's could've very well been slightly stronger (or vice versa) at the time of landfall. 2008 for instance, had Gustav and Ike hit the US just below major status, but were equally destructive along the coast.
And going back four decades (1976-2016), we've had a surprisingly small number of storms that have made landfall above 115mph:
1979-Frederic (120)
1989-Hugo (140)
1992-Andrew (165)
1999-Bret (120)
2004-Charley (150), Ivan (120), Jeanne (120)
2005-Dennis (120), Katrina (125)
So there may be more read into this than what's really there, unlike Florida's hurricane drought, which was quite sudden, though Texas had a similar occurrence between 1989 and 1999.
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