for anywhere along the Gulf coast IMO.
hurricaneCW wrote:Well if we get a hyperactive September and October, than 16-18 storms should be no problem. I'm still thinking 14-16 but will probably lower if nothing gets going by early September.
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hurricaneCW wrote:Well if we get a hyperactive September and October, than 16-18 storms should be no problem. I'm still thinking 14-16 but will probably lower if nothing gets going by early September.
For what it's worth, the 2005 season, as of August 22, would have been on Jose. So that season is 7 storms ahead already.
hurricaneCW wrote:Well I knew eventually all those who said give it time would cave in. There are some huge factors that are causing the inactivity that stems way beyond the Atlantic basin. The global activity is at a record low and no signs of change anywhere. We could be talking about the biggest forecast bust in history. 1 Fish is all I see in the next 2 weeks, that's all.
Tropics Guy wrote:Three weeks from peak & the basin should be full of activity in a normal year by now. Really think that there are other environmental factors at play that are inhibiting development besides SAL, SST's & shear, etc. Don't really know when the "switch" will be turned on, but if it doesn't happen soon, then many of the preseason predictions will be a big bust.............
TG
KWT wrote:Ok I've been carefully studying everything and I've come to the conclusion...
The season will bust at least from a numbers point of view...there is no way we get even close to 18NS with the current set-up aloft. Its a little better but its nothing too impressive and the MJO isn't even going to become favourable, all the focus is on the phase 3-4 which isn't really going to do the Atlantic any good bar maybe Africa and the far E.atlantic.
Now that is not to say we won't get a biggie threaten land over the next two months, and I'd still bank on a big October storm BUT I've now given up on this season producing even 15NS yet alone 17-20NS the agencies were calling for.
What I see is nothing that screams a hyper period is coming up, will probably roll along close to climo for the rest of the season, so maybe 12-13NS. Pretty much we are stuck in a rut that shows NO sign of changing and if its not produced the goods so far, its probably not going to do much good down the line either.
So my call for the rest of the season now is....
10-5-3
which would lead to 13-6-3 overall...we will see what happens but I see a rather massive bust coming for all the agencies...ACE probably will come in still decently above average though due to a couple of long tracking hurricanes.
Note, even forecasting 10NS might be a little on the agressive side but we will see!
ColinDelia wrote:Of course there are factors we still don't understand. That isn't and shouldn't be part of the debate. Whether we ended up with 8 storms, 16 storms or 24 storms this season wouldn't change that knowledge much at all. Our lack of knowledge is not only known it is quantifiable. It is well detailed in the CSU papers. I would argue that one season won't teach us much of anything in that regard. You need many more data points than that. But how about over more than a century?
CSU's method explains 51% of the variance from 1900-2009. You get the same 51% if you break it down into two periods from 1900-1948 and from 1949-2009. So it is true there are still factors we don't understand. Over more than a century of records half of the variance in the number of tropical storms is explained by their method.
That doesn't mean that they are basin-wide factors like ocean temps, sea level pressures, the Southern Oscillation and so on. Then again they might be. But it also might be that there are small, random perturbations that will never be explained (or maybe they are small perturbations that will be explained. who really knows?) I imagine it is some combination.
For now CSU's method explains about half the variance in the number of named storms in a season. On August 1 their method can explain whether the rest of the season is going to be above average or below average 84% of the time. So it will be wrong in that regard 1 out of 6 seasons. There's still a lot to learn. This is just the pioneer stage.
SoupBone wrote:ColinDelia wrote:Of course there are factors we still don't understand. That isn't and shouldn't be part of the debate. Whether we ended up with 8 storms, 16 storms or 24 storms this season wouldn't change that knowledge much at all. Our lack of knowledge is not only known it is quantifiable. It is well detailed in the CSU papers. I would argue that one season won't teach us much of anything in that regard. You need many more data points than that. But how about over more than a century?
CSU's method explains 51% of the variance from 1900-2009. You get the same 51% if you break it down into two periods from 1900-1948 and from 1949-2009. So it is true there are still factors we don't understand. Over more than a century of records half of the variance in the number of tropical storms is explained by their method.
That doesn't mean that they are basin-wide factors like ocean temps, sea level pressures, the Southern Oscillation and so on. Then again they might be. But it also might be that there are small, random perturbations that will never be explained (or maybe they are small perturbations that will be explained. who really knows?) I imagine it is some combination.
For now CSU's method explains about half the variance in the number of named storms in a season. On August 1 their method can explain whether the rest of the season is going to be above average or below average 84% of the time. So it will be wrong in that regard 1 out of 6 seasons. There's still a lot to learn. This is just the pioneer stage.
I don't think 110 years of data is a large enough sampling considering Earth is approx. 4.5 Billion years old. There is a lot we still don't know yet and it would be incredibly naive and arrogant to think we do (this is not directed at you...in general). We should learn things from each season; especially one that bucks many forecasts. I see this season heating up soon, but you can't deny that right now (globally) it's a bit too quiet.
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