Andrew92 wrote:What about later months, namely September? Or Gulf strikes in Mexico?
-Andrew92
For the 17 El Nino's since 1877 that eventually reached the strong category:
1)
CONUS: Sep H hits:
-1965: Betsy hit S FL as a cat 3 on 9/8 and LA as a cat 4 on 9/9-10
-1930: Storm #2 hit NC Outer Banks as a cat 1 on 9/12
-1896: Storm #2 hit MA as a cat 1 on 9/10; Storm #4 hit the FL Big Bend on 9/29 as a cat 3
-1888: Storm #6 hit SE MA as a cat 1 on 9/26
-1877: Storm #2 hit SE LA-FL Panhandle as a cat 1 on 9/18
Oct H hits:
-1987: Floyd hit S FL as a cat 1 on 10/12
-1899: storm #9 hit near the SC/NC border as a cat 2 on 10/31
-1888: storm #7 hit the FL Big Bend as a cat 2 on 10/10
-1877: storm #4 hit the FL Panhandle as a cat 3 on 10/2-3
So, Sep-Oct Hit dates: 9/8-10, 9/10, 9/12, 9/18*, 9/26*, 9/29, 10/2-3*, 10/10*, 10/12, 10/31
* = 2nd year superstrong El Nino
So,
7 of the 17 strong oncoming Nino seasons had a CONUS H hit from 10 H's in either or both of Sep and Oct. So, don't let your guard down.
These suggest to me that there
might be a heightened chance in NW FL of a cat 2-3 late Sep-early Oct. based on 1896, 1888, and 1877 despite these all being prior to 1900
especially because all three of these were 2nd year strong El Nino and 2 of the 3 were superstrong similar to 2015.
The 2nd year strongs are 1987, 1940, 1905, 1896, 1888, and 1877. 4 of these 6 had at least one hit.
3 of the 6 2nd year strong El Nino and both of the 2nd year superstrong (1888 and 1877) had two hits (1st in mid to late Sep. and 2nd in very late Sep. to early Oct.).2.
MX: both of these were during 2nd year superstrong Nino-1888: storm #4 hit as a cat 1 9/5-7
-1877: storm #4 hit as a cat 1 9/29
Bottom line: assuming we're headed for superstrong El Nino, these stats suggest that late Sep. through early Oct. may have heightened risk of 1-2 MX/CONUS hits as strong as a cat 3. In the CONUS, NW FL may very well be the area with the most heightened risk. Edit/Aside: Happy 1,000th post Ninel!