Category5Kaiju wrote:Hammy wrote:AlphaToOmega wrote:Looking at every hurricane season directly preceding a weak or moderate La Nina since 2000, we see a pattern:
-2020: Teddy, Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, and Iota (6 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2017: Lee, Maria and Ophelia (3 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2016: Matthew, Nicole, and Otto (3 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2011: Ophelia and Rina (2 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2008: Omar and Paloma (2 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2005: Rita, Wilma, and Beta (3 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2001: Iris and Michelle (2 major hurricanes after September 12)
-2000: Isaac and Keith (2 major hurricanes after September 12)
Each of these weak or moderate La Nina seasons features multiple major hurricanes after September 12. With this amount of evidence, I believe we will see at least a total of 5 major hurricanes before the season is over.
I would personally use September 20, rather than today's date, as a metric--storms like Lee, Maria, or Teddy had either already formed or were on the verge of formation, and had high model support for becoming strong hurricanes--the present model trend is towards there being no hurricanes (let alone majors) during the forecast period.
We're highly unlikely to have any majors (or any hurricanes at all) in the next week given the open Atlantic as everything (Larry included) has underperformed over the open Atlantic.
We'll see what happens, although I cannot imagine how for the rest of this season the Atlantic would underperform. I mean, we're entering La Nina, and the WPAC and EPAC have definitely been underperforming overall as well. For all three of these basins to underperform would be pretty surprising, and "surprising" is an understatement.
Very true, but always good to give a window when calculating what has formed after a certain point, since some of those were only a few days out from forming, something we aren't going to repeat this year.
1990 is an interesting comparison season, and the middle portion of the season went somewhat similarly--we had an active August, with 6/2/1, including a hurricane into Mexico (compared to this year's 6/3/2) followed by a generally subpar September--Isidore formed on Sep 3, and while it lasted two weeks (peaking at 100 mph), nothing else actually formed for over two weeks--TD11 on September Sep 18, and then Josephine on Sep 21, which similar to so many waves this season, turned NW, went out to sea and weakened to a depression within days. October on the other hand was quite busy--4/3/0 for the month, in addition to Josephine eventually reaching hurricane intensity.
We're going to reach mid-month with 3/1/1 for September, which is one weak and one moderate tropical storm past what 1990 produced, and it sees we're going to see a spate of weak storms over the next week or so before things pick up again as far as stronger systems go.
The above post is not official and should not be used as such. It is 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.