Lodi News-Sentinel

What hurricane hunters, forecaster­s do the other 6 months of year

- Michaela Mulligan TAMPA BAY TIMES

TAMPA, Fla. — Between the hum of the plane’s engine and the blasting winds outside, Cmdr. Adam Abitbol listens to what he calls his playlist du jour. It’s sometimes made up of hip-hop. Or Indie. Or classical. But never country.

This is a routine for Abitbol, who spent about 250 hours in the air last year — the equivalent of about 10 1/2 days.

For six months of the year, Abitbol is a pilot for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Hurricane Hunters, based in Lakeland.

Just a few hundred miles away, in Miami, forecaster­s hunch over screens scrutinizi­ng models 24/7 during hurricane season, which stretches from June 1 to Nov. 30.

It’s a rinse-and-repeat cycle for the forecaster­s, scientists, pilots and crew behind the hourly hurricane forecasts — track, fly, forecast.

The public is hyperaware of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s work during the hurricane season.

But the offseason can at times be even busier.

In December, the National Hurricane Center’s forecaster­s begin reviewing hurricanes from the past season. The team of about 10 forecaster­s chronicles the life of a hurricane — where it tracked, how strong it was, how long it lasted and the destructio­n it caused.

The result is an authoritat­ive record of that individual storm, said John Cangialosi, acting branch chief of the Hurricane Specialist Unit at the National Hurricane Center.

Ultimately, the reports allow forecaster­s to scrutinize themselves. The Hurricane Center wants to know what it got right and wrong.

Larger storms like Hurricane Ian have multiple forecaster­s working on the review at once.

After the reviews finish around February, the forecaster­s spend the rest of the season in workshops.

The Hurricane Center trains city managers from across the United States. These are the people who make evacuation calls. Over three weeks, the Hurricane Center teaches them when to make the tough decisions based on its forecasts.

“We want them to understand what will be coming their way,” Cangialosi said.

After those three weeks, the Hurricane Center forecaster­s teach other internatio­nal meteorolog­ists. Then they go on tour, visiting other states to teach their emergency officials.

Come June 1, forecaster­s fixate on the weather. That’s all they do, Cangialosi said. The offseason requires more multitaski­ng, which is why it can feel busier, he said.

The No. 1 question Abitbol gets asked is “what’s it like to fly in a hurricane?” A close second is, “what do you do the other six months of the year?”

The administra­tion creates a fiscal year allocation plan for its nine planes. The plane’s tasks could be as simple as maintenanc­e or pilot training. Other planes will be dedicated to research projects, some that could span the entire year.

So far this year, pilots have been flying missions out of Hawaii to study the atmospheri­c rivers that have dumped heavy rain in California. On the other side of the country, a Twin Otter, one of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s smaller two-engine planes, is recording the dwindling population of North Atlantic right whales. In the Florida Keys, another Twin Otter is mapping the changing coastline.

Outside of a pilot’s time in the air, they all have ground jobs that assist in the day-today activities at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s ’s aircraft operations center. Pilots may budget, train other pilots or perform a number of other jobs that keep the building running.

 ?? NOAA/GETTY IMAGES ?? In this NOAA GOES-East satellite handout image, Hurricane Dorian moves past Grand Bahama Island as a a Category 4 storm on Sept. 2, 2019 in the Atlantic Ocean.
NOAA/GETTY IMAGES In this NOAA GOES-East satellite handout image, Hurricane Dorian moves past Grand Bahama Island as a a Category 4 storm on Sept. 2, 2019 in the Atlantic Ocean.

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