Hammy wrote:Ian should bring us up to the base-level 'near normal' criteria of 70 within the next 36 hours
Tomorrow at 5 AM.
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Hammy wrote:Ian should bring us up to the base-level 'near normal' criteria of 70 within the next 36 hours
cycloneye wrote:Not surprised by this statement. It can happen.
https://twitter.com/DerekOrtt/status/1575468603239022593
Abdullah wrote:cycloneye wrote:Not surprised by this statement. It can happen.
https://twitter.com/DerekOrtt/status/1575468603239022593
Based on what though? Is there some special climatological factor that just changed that'll make it active?
Teban54 wrote: Aside: I just found this timeline of a ridiculously backloaded season, 1894:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/timeline/4qqln6mngdssmmjwkw91tf1ywow275p.png
The season ended with above-average ACE by today's standards (135), with each major hurricane generating 25+ units.
abajan wrote:So, with all the predictions of a hyperactive season by many experts, it turns out we had a below average ACE. Is that right?
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