toad strangler wrote:cycloneye wrote:The private firm WeatherTiger Junes forecast goes up to 19/9/5 from the April's 16/8/4.
https://weathertiger.com/tropical/atlan ... june-2020/
Two point key take away for me from this write up by weathertiger....
1. One piece of good news: the Kirkland Signature three-pack of tropical storms that have affected the U.S. coast so far this year (Arthur, Bertha, Cristobal) have no enduring predictive value for the year ahead. Hurricane season 2020 is running hot so far (~95th percentile), but prior TC activity has no correlation with the rest of the season until early August. Of the eleven fastest starts since 1950, five seasons ended above normal, two near normal, and four below normal. This early season activity is a shot over the bow, but nothing more.
2. Given the similarities to 1964 in both the Atlantic and the tropical and mid-latitude Pacific, I am concerned this year will not only be very active, but also have a steering current regime during the peak of the season that is risky for the continental U.S., with stronger than average Western Atlantic Ridging. That is, as always, a low confidence forecast at this range, and we’ll have a better idea how those critical steering currents may shape up later this summer.
1964 was very bad for Florida with 3 hurricane landfalls in Cleo, Dora and Isbell. Hopefully that doesn't happen this year.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk