WeatherLovingDoc wrote:Please pardon my lack of knowledge-I did try to look up the answer to my questions before posting:
Does the lack of significant hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean over the last decade+, impact their frequency when conditions become ripe? Also, does it increase the likelihood statistically of a major storm during peak season. I don't want to rely on intuition. Ty.
Good questions. My hunch is that "when conditions become ripe" is the key phrase. Regardless of the amount of activity in previous years, when conditions become ripe, your going to have activity. The only connection could be that conditions aren't going to always be ripe. So if you went through a period of not so great conditions, then you cyclically, you would be due for the change to more positive. As apparently we are witnessing this year. Not that this year has been incredibly active, but compared to most recent years, we are somewhat ahead of schedule I think. A "ripe" season will increase the odds statistically of a major storm during "peak season". But even during a "slow" season, there is always a respectable chance for a major storm in early Sept. (peak). This is my strictly unscientific outlook.