Cpv17 wrote:Steve wrote:WiscoWx02 wrote:Honestly never thought I’d see a year even more unfavorable than 2013

We’ll see if that changes in the coming weeks but my
expectations of such a switch flip are quickly dwindling. In close development is still a possibility come end of September and October but even that I think will be stunted because of another variable we are likely missing probably involving 3rd year La Nina’s.
You don't want to put money on this.
What are you thinking Steve? You seem pretty knowledgeable.
I'm more in an observational perspective this year as far as the season goes. I don't think I even participated in the site's annual contest. Heading into June 1st, things looked primed for an above average or possible hyperactive year. But there are some oddball factors - 3rd year La Nina with a weight mostly toward 3/4, MJO signaling has been pretty weak for the most part until now, etc. And even now in a favorable phase, it's not all that far outside of the circle. We're at the time of year where you just have to look at climatology. Some seasons get going earlier, some later. But really any time between now and the peak on or around 9/10, we should see multiple systems. Max would probably be 3 or 4 if we get a burst effect. Then things may slack up a little depending on what the MJO does and whether it cranks back down into 8/1/2/3 again before the season ends. I think it will but it depends on when. Say it goes back into the circle (or not) around the middle of September, it would probably go back into favorable very late September or in early-mid October. In addition, it seems like there would be a couple of fish storms at any point. If I was going to put in a guess at this point, I'd think the season would be somewhere in the 12-15NS, probably more of them hurricanes from this point forward. So we could end up with something like 13 or 14NS, 7/8/9H and probably a couple of majors.
More important than the numbers are whether people get any direct impacts/effects from storms. There are conflicting signals in that many expert's analog seasons featured years with more out to sea systems than landfalls, but there are also plenty of landfalls. The current setup would tend to indicate systems getting farther west if not maybe so much a western-biased year - but we'll have to wait to see what happens with Atlantic ridging as well as the NAO. If the NAO goes toward positive and establishes itself at least temporarily, and if we have most of the ocean blocked from escapes at say 40N/50N/60N, then systems will get close to the islands and North America.
I don't know what's going to happen, so I'm just watching for now. Threat zone is probably Mississippi along the coast over to North Carolina and then northern Mexico/Texas, Canadian Maritimes, Louisiana and probably the northeast in that order.