NDG wrote:Alyono wrote:Sanibel wrote:The stationary people were right. I can't believe it. A staller here is more likely to move north. However a staller here is not good for development because the graveyard will more likely crush it - especially in 2013. Circulation is 9/10th of the law so we'll see if it survives.
The EC is not a graveyard. One really needs to stop listening to the disproven John Hope Rule
Earlier in the thread I posted the 12 storms that formed in the last 10 years in the EC. That means we average 1.2 storms there a season
I agree with you, IMO the graveyard in the eastern Caribbean only happens on certain years and or certain times of the year, like you said many storms have formed here or have moved through this area without a problem.
And those storms would be the exception, not the rule. The East Caribbean is generally unkind to tropical cyclone year round. The narrow corridor of water between the Greater Antilles and Hispaniola allows for the circulations of developing systems to suck in dry air coming off the downslope of Hispaniola and off northern South America. In addition, the trade winds accelerate ahead of developing disturbances, south of Hispaniola, which reduces surface convergence and promotes sinking air.