psyclone wrote:The risk now is people overshooting to the downside. Anything that is extremely anomalous is unlikely to persist. The current dead streak is insanely anomalous. I'd bet it finds a way to end. Just as forecasting a record season. That too is extremely anomalous and will likely find a way to not happen. As it stands now we have 2 extremely high risk months to tiptoe through. Will nothing continue to happen? Perhaps. But that would be a crazy extreme and I'd take the opposite side of that bet. If you're in the Caribbean, central or east Gulf ...in many of those areas the highest climo risk remains ahead. We're dancing through a minefield right now but we have a long way to go and the risk of a high impact event(s) remains substantial...IMO.
This is very true. The Atlantic has proven favorable enough to produce 3 hurricanes (and an unprecedented early July Category 5) already, but there's no doubt this ongoing dead period since bell ringing day has been very anomalous. Usually instability increases in September and October, so if that's really what has been the culprit for the lack of activity, we could see a busy late season. Unlike 2013 and 2022, shear has been well below normal in most of the deep tropics. Just because the very high numbers are on track to bust doesn't mean that the Atlantic is going to stay as hostile and quiet as it currently is now.