A list of puns related to "2004 Atlantic Hurricane Season"
FYI be prepared
The initial seasonal tropical outlook released yesterday by the group led by Dr. Phil Klotzbach at Colorado State University (CSU) forecasts another above-average hurricane forecast for the 2021 Atlantic season, citing the likely absence of El NiΓ±o as a primary factor.
CSUβs forecast indicates that several climate factors are driving the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, which suggests above-normal activity:
The tropical Pacific currently has weak La NiΓ±a conditions; that is, water temperatures are somewhat cooler than normal in the eastern and central tropical Pacific. La NiΓ±a tends to weaken upper-level wind shear across the Caribbean and tropical Atlantic enhancing activity. While these waters may warm slightly during the next few months, CSU does not currently anticipate El NiΓ±o for the Atlantic hurricane season's peak. El NiΓ±o tends to increase upper-level westerly winds across the Caribbean into the tropical Atlantic, tearing apart hurricanes as they try to form.
Much of the Atlantic Basin's waters are also already warmer than average, particularly in the subtropics near Bermuda and the Northeast Seaboard. Parts of the Gulf of Mexico are also warmer than average, except for the northwestern Gulf due to a carryover from the Arctic blast in February. An above-average number of tropical storms and hurricanes is more likely if temperatures in the main development region (MDR) between Africa and the Caribbean Sea and the Caribbean are warmer than average. Conversely, below-average ocean temperatures can lead to fewer tropical systems than if waters were warmer. How much dry air rolls off the coast of Africa will also need to be monitored. Even if water temperatures are boiling and there is little wind shear, dry air can still disrupt developing tropical cyclones and even prohibit their birth.
The CSU forecast also anticipates an above-normal probability of a major hurricane (Category 3-4-5) making landfall along the continental United States coastline and the Caribbean.
Entire continental U.S. coastline - 69% (average for last century is 52%) U.S. East Coast Including Peninsula Florida - 45% (average for last century is 31%) Gulf Coast from the Florida Panhandle westward to Brownsville - 44% (average for last century is 30%) Tracking into the Caribbean (10-20Β°N, 88-60Β°W) 58% (average for last century is 42%)
The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was so active that forecasters resorted to naming storms with letters from the Gr
... keep reading on reddit β‘I'm forecasting
Atlantic:
17 tropical storms
8 hurricanes
4 major hurricanes
Pacific:
16 tropical storms
7 hurricanes
4 major hurricanes
They came out late March 2021.
So 4 Cat 5 hurricanes in one season, with two of them sub-900 mbar and one in the very low 900s, two major July hurricanes (with a Cat 5 even occurring in that month), 28 named storms, and 250 ACE can undoubtedly put 2005 in one the most "elite," arguably if not the most, recorded Atlantic hurricane season. But does anybody know what exactly made 2005 so extreme and powerful? Other hyperactive seasons like 1995, 2004, 2017, or 2020 were not able to produce more than 2 Cat 5s, and sst anomalies-wise 2010 was much warmer than 2005 yet still only produced 19 storms with none being a Cat 5 and 165 ACE. I have not been able to find much helpful info regarding this, and I am genuinely curious about it.
This is perhaps the weirdest Atlantic hurricane season in recent memory in my opinion. I just find it fascinating that this actually could have been a very impressive, active to possibly hyperactive season (with several major forecasts calling up to 19-20 NSs, 9-11 hurricanes, and 5-6 major at the upper end), and we all know how that turned out in the end.
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