SconnieCane wrote:Category5Kaiju wrote:tolakram wrote:Second wettest summer in Cincinnati on record. Hurricane seasons for our wettest years are all over the place.
https://i.imgur.com/LhMRmqX.png
Of the top 5 two had significant hurricanes into Florida. Other than that there doesn't seem to be any correlation with fast or slow seasons.
Haha, 2013's in there...but then you look at 1928, 1932, and 1998, and oh snap.
I think 2013 can pretty much be thrown out as an Atlantic hurricane season analog whenever it pops up, since the thing that caused it to fail was not really part of the usual suite of seasonal "predictors," correct?
Oh yeah of course; much like how 2005 was extreme on one end of how "bad" a season could be, 2013 is the extreme polar opposite. Some people love to bring up "2013" whenever a given season features conditions that are somewhat unfavorable for TCs at any point during such season (but more commonly in the beginning months); I remember seeing such sorts of comments literally every year since 2017 when I first tracked storms (heck, last year when all that dust was around during the summer the 2013 comments on social media never ceased to amaze me). Even this year in May/June when the sst anomalies were marginal and when some person on Twitter made an interesting Tweet about the AMOC slowing down, there were quite a few "will 2021 be another 2013?" kind of comments on social media. However, due to the very specific and rare conditions that caused 2013 to fail miserably (stability, wind shear, THC weakening suddenly, literally bunch together any possible factor that could kill a season and you will get a 2013), I highly doubt that there will be another season like 2013 anytime soon; such would be warmly appreciated given the past active and horrible seasons we've been through, but a season with only 2 hurricanes, 0 majors, and those two hurricanes not even reaching Cat 2 strength during a cool neutral phase? Not sure how well any near future season could replicate or beat how extreme 2013 was.
But yeah bottomline is, until I see it actually occur I will not believe it. Ever since 2017, the "another 2013" comments have failed to materialize each year, and I guarantee you that these comments will appear again in 2022 and 2023 and so forth. It's part of the clockwork of tracking hurricanes!