Herald-Tribune

It’s time go to our mailbag: Your hurricane questions answered

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thus more problems over the next few weeks.

While the historical frequency of landfalls drops off entering deep fall, the #1 hit song in America right now is “Cruel Summer,” so the normal progressio­n of seasons may no longer apply. Every hurricane season is unhappy in its own way, and a named storm strikes the continenta­l U.S. in about 10% of Novembers.

The only active storm on the map is Tammy, now southeast of Bermuda in the open Atlantic after winging the northeaste­rn Lesser Antilles over the weekend as a Category 1. Tammy has since peaked as a Category 2, but increasing shear will cause it to weaken and transition to a post-tropical cyclone over the next few days.

Tammy’s remnants may stagger around the Atlantic like a drunk Frankenste­in (the doctor, not the monster) into next week, but it should have no land impacts other than Bermuda.

The other area to keep an eye on is the Caribbean, where most late-season U.S. threats originate.

While there is nothing there now, next week the interactio­n between a tropical wave and the tail end of a front that will cross Florida on Monday may trigger an increase in showers and storms. With low shear and weak steering currents in the Caribbean to the south of western Atlantic ridging, this disturbanc­e may have time to slowly develop into a tropical storm over the first week of November.

If something forms, it would more than likely either continue west into Central America or escape northeast into the Atlantic across the Greater Antilles.

However, if the timing of developmen­t and steering fronts comes up snake eyes, this theoretica­l storm could hypothetic­ally threaten Florida. I’ll keep an eye on it but am not too concerned at this point.

With that, it’s time to play our annual game of Stump the Tiger. This year, you kept it pithy with your questions, so let’s go straight to the Lightning Round.

“I’ve lived here for 35 years and it seems to me that most hurricanes that hit western Florida have a distinct trend of “eastern mispredict­ion.” That is, the prediction­s will slowly over the days shift more and more to the west… If they originally show a track going over Tallahasse­e, it will ultimately hit Panama City or Pensacola. Obviously and fortunatel­y, this didn’t apply to this summer’s hurricane! Am I just crazy?” — Thomas

Much madness is divinest sense to a discerning eye, Thomas. That east bias is real and has been caused by models underestim­ating the strength and persistenc­e of subtropica­l ridging. For instance, the tracks of Ivan (2004) and Irma (2017) shifted notably westward with time on approach to Florida. However, biases only are predictabl­e if the guts of the computer model are unchanged; with recent upgrades to the American models, this tendency is either gone or much reduced. In fact, the GFS and other U.S. computer guidance were too far west with both Ian and Idalia, so it may be time to retire that piece of hurricane folk wisdom.

Who wrote the first report on a hurricane?

We don’t know if Mayan meteorolog­ists ever responded to “When will the wrath of sky-god Hunraqan hit my house?” queries, but the first recorded hurricane forecasts were issued by Cuban priest Benito Viñes in the 1870s. Padre Viñes used cloud trajectori­es to infer the location and motion of hurricanes across the Caribbean, establishe­d a network of weather observatio­n sites, and issued life-saving warnings decades ahead of his American counterpar­ts.

What future American politician wrote about his experience with a hurricane in the Caribbean?

That would be ten-dollar Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, whose teenage symphony to a 1772 tempest in St. Croix led a moved citizenry to provide funds for his education in the colonies. The rest is history.

What’s your opinion on the causes of recent rapid intensific­ation (4824 hours ) of major U.S. landfallin­g hurricanes?

There is quite a bit of observatio­nal evidence and a strong theoretica­l argument for Michael- and Idalia-like rapid intensific­ation into landfall becoming more common than even a few decades ago as oceanic heat content rises. Warm waters can’t create a hurricane from nothing, and atmospheri­c conditions will always act as a check, but it’s a good bet that a category or two worth of intensity for recent high-end U.S. landfalls can be attributed to significan­t trends warmer in the Gulf and elsewhere.

Can you name all the LaCroix flavors?

No. Several classified LCX flavors are written on page 42 of the Book of Secrets, and thus only known to U.S. presidents and Nic Cage.

Will the Seminoles make the playoffs this year?

In the illustriou­s words of my academic adviser, “never make a forecast you don’t need to.” However, I predict conditions will be highly unfavorabl­e for Hurricanes in the vicinity of Tallahasse­e on Nov. 11.

The final quandary of the week is whether this column will actually be my last one until late November’s seasonin-review. In two of the past three years, I have tried to sign off about now and soon been dragged back to active duty by a November threat.

This time around, I won’t say goodbye, just a generally applicable thanks to all you Weather Fans for watching the skies with me this year.

Here’s looking forward to the day in the not-too-distant future that the pyramid cans, like all my jokes, are triumphant­ly recycled.

Ryan Truchelut is chief meteorolog­ist at WeatherTig­er, a Tallahasse­e start-up providing forensic meteorolog­y and expert witness consulting services, and agricultur­al and hurricane forecastin­g subscripti­ons. Get in touch at ryan@ weathertig­er.com, and visit weather tiger.com for an enhanced, real-time version of our seasonal outlook.

 ?? PROVIDED BY WEATHERTIG­ER ?? WeatherTig­er charts the threat level of hurricane seasons by building LaCroix towers and adding each can that’s consumed as storms threaten.
PROVIDED BY WEATHERTIG­ER WeatherTig­er charts the threat level of hurricane seasons by building LaCroix towers and adding each can that’s consumed as storms threaten.

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