#131 Postby Andrew92 » Wed Apr 22, 2015 9:50 pm
I agree that way too many names are retired in this day and age. Part of me almost wonders if it's to introduce new names to be used every year, so some convenient excuse has to be made unless we didn't get far enough down the list.
For instance, what did Keith in 2000 do in Belize that Hattie back in 1961 didn't? The latter storm, along with memories of another one in 1931, forced the capital to be moved inland to Belmopan! I wasn't around then, but Hattie probably deserved to be retired for that, plus killing as many people as it did (I believe close to 300 or so, someone correct me if I'm wrong). Keith? 5 dead in the same country and 24 overall. And Iris wasn't much better of a retirement candidate, even though it was a category 4. 31 dead and 19 missing is tragic, but that country has seen worse.
Storms like Isidore and Lili get retired and Gordon doesn't?
Also to go to the EPAC, names like Kenna and Odile were retired, but I believe I once read Liza wasn't? The deadliest named hurricane in recent years in Mexico, if I'm not mistaken?
This isn't meant to offend anyone who was significantly affected by those storms, and I sincerely can empathize with your pain if you lost a loved one and/or everything you had. I'm just saying that I agree with Alyono, just because it happens here or there with a destructive hurricane, doesn't make it legendary in the grand scheme of things.
One more I might add to Alyono's list for names I would retire would be Joan in 1988. It did kill 148 people in Nicaragua, left 100 missing, and was one of that country's worst disasters in history. I know Mitch was worse there when it unleashed that vicious mudslide on the Casitas volcano, but those type of storms are rare in that country and that one was a doozy in terms of damage on top of it.
Just some food for thought...
-Andrew92
0 likes