WeatherBoy2000 wrote:Hammy wrote:I don't know what visible indicators there are to tell whether this has happened or not, but I wonder if something similar to 2013 (albeit later since we did have Erin) might've happened given basin-wide shear and intense troughing was a characteristic for that year--or if Erin's sheer size could have itself disrupted the ocean circulation in some way
I don't think Erin's the cause of what we're seeing now as the basin's largely been in an unfavorable state since the beginning of the season. Imo Erin was the equivalent to Andrew in 1992, an anomaly that found a small gap of favorability in an otherwise hostile basin.
Then it goes back to a question of, could there be another issue with the ocean circulation, and (whether that's the case or not) are there any indicators that would point one way or another
That reaching October at 7/1/1 is even on the table at all shows something is clearly wrong with the atmosphere
On an interesting note, the Atlantic has malfunctioned in some way five out of the eight times this list was used: 1983 and 2013 being the obvious ones, 2007 and 2019 having above average named storms and two Cat 5's but largely weak. short lived storms outside of that (and below average hurricanes), and then whatever's going on this year--and all of those ended up drastically underperforming the forecasts in some way (even 1983 had 4 storms and 3 hurricanes compared to 8 and 5 forecast)