The Palm Beach Post

Deadly hurricane season set to end

Hundreds die in fierce cycle ‘where everything went supersonic.’

- By Kimberly Miller Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

In August, the waters of the equatorial Pacific cooled, quieting powerful western gales that act as a balm to the tropical Atlantic during hurricane season.

The atmosphere took advantage of the lull, whipping quickly into a violent lather that crashed three Category 4 storms into the U.S., created the longest lived 185 mph hurricane in recorded history and drowned Houston in a tropical broth 5-feet deep.

The devastatin­g 2017 hurricane season ends Thursday. Its formidable résumé also includes the most named storms since 2012, more than double the normal number of major hurricanes, and an intensity and longevity cyclone score twice as fierce as the 30-year historical mean.

Hundreds of people in the U.S. and Caribbean died in storm-related incidents, although a final tally may not be known until the National Hurricane Center completes its storm reviews. Texas

officials said in September that about 80 people were killed by Hurricane Harvey. In Florida, 72 people died from Hurricane Irma-related accidents, including five in Palm Beach County, according to the state’s Division of Emergency Management.

“It’s just one of those seasons where everything went supersonic,” said Chris Dolce, a digital meteorolog­ist with Weather.com. “Everything that was out there, just wanted to develop. Every fledgling system decided to become a storm.”

It wasn’t just a La Niña-influenced atmosphere that created the hyperactiv­e season, which began with Tropical Storm Arlene in April and wound down with Tropical Storm Rina on Nov. 7.

Abnormally warm sea-surface temperatur­es and a westward-sitting Bermuda High increased the fuel for the 17 named storms that formed, and pushed them closer to the U.S. as they rode the high’s underbelly as if on a conveyor belt.

Four hurricanes — Harvey, Irma, Maria and Nate — made landfall in the continenta­l U.S. or Puerto Rico. Harvey, Irma and Maria were Category 4 giants at landfall.

Dan Brown, acting chief of the National Hurricane Center’s hurricane specialist unit, said the number of storms threatenin­g land increased the pressure on forecaster­s this season.

“With a storm out over the open ocean, there may be ships in the way, but when storms are headed toward any highly populated area, we want to make sure people are getting the message and taking the actions they need to take to save their lives,” Brown said.

The first big challenge came with Hurricane Harvey. Born in the deep eastern Caribbean on Aug. 17, Harvey mustered only tropical storm strength before dissipatin­g to a tropical depression and then reforming in the Gulf of Mexico.

The storm became a major

gory 3 hurricane on Aug. 24 and rapidly intensifie­d to a Category 4 before making landfall near Port O’Connor, Texas, on Aug. 26. From there, it meandered, dropping more than 60 inches of rain and causing unpreceden­ted flooding in the Houston area.

The National Weather Service tweeted; “This event is unpreceden­ted and all impacts are unknown and beyond anything experience­d.”

Still, Brown said Harvey was a well-forecast storm with meteorolog­ists predicting the track, rapid intensific­ation and deluge of rain.

“Our track forecasts this year have set records for accuracy at each of the forecast time periods out five days,” Brown said. “The three most damaging hurricanes — Harvey, Irma and Maria — the track errors were 25 percent lower than the long-term mean.”

Intensity was still a struggle, especially rapid intensific­ation, which is considered an increase in wind speeds of 34 mph or more over a 24-hour period.

Brown said there were an estimated 40 cases of rapid intensific­ation this season. Just six of them were accurately forecast.

Hurricane Maria’s 15-hour rapid intensific­ation from a Category 1 storm to a Cat 5 was compared to 2005’s legendary Hurricane Wilma, which took just 12 hours to reach Cat 5 status.

Maria landed in Puerto Rico on Sept. 20, strafing the island with 155 mph winds. It wiped out Puerto Rico’s electrical grid, cut water lines and turned green hillsides brown from wind burn. As of Nov. 20 — two months after Maria made landfall — just 46 percent of the island had electricit­y.

had 10 hurricanes in a row and they were all sandwiched between early August and mid-October,” Dolce said. “It’s one of those years where you are just really taken aback.”

In between Harvey and Maria, was Irma, which formed Aug. 30 and quickly intensifie­d to a Category 5 hurricane. It held that lofty status for an astonishin­g three days.

About 6.5 million Floridians evacuated for the storm — the most in the state’s history.his was a big, nasty Category 5 hurricane and it got people’s attention,” said Jason Senkbeil, a University of Alabama associate professor who interviewe­d evacuees at a service plaza on Sept. 7 and 8. “Some people thought all of Florida was going to experience Cat 4 or 5 winds.”

Irma’s fury was reduced somewhat by a rub against Cuba’s northern coast. It made landfall as a Category 4 storm near Florida’s Cudjoe Key on Sept. 10 at 9:10 a.m.

“This season definitely put things in perspectiv­e,” said Jonathan Rizzo, the warning coordinati­on meteorolog­ist for the National Weather Service in Key West. “The fact that Irma remained a Cat 5 for so long, even among intense hurricanes, it’s not something you normally see.”

Rizzo, who lives in Key West, said the weight of Irma’s potential impact hit him on Sept. 4 — Labor Day. The five-day forecast cone was inching closer and almost every possible path had some sort of impact on the Keys.

He sent his family to Orlando two days later.

Rizzo was stationed at the Marathon emergency operations center, which had to relocate to Ocean Reef when there were concerns it wouldn’t hold up to Irma’s blow. During the storm he was so focused on forecastin­g, he didn’t have time to worry about his home.

“The reason we stay is to make sure that our emergency managers and the public gets the critical informatio­n they need,” said Rizzo, whose home weathered the storm. “I know I sound nonchalant, but after 2005 and seeing Wilma’s impacts, you start to realize that you can survive this. We’re not victims, we are survivors.”

Statewide, 90 percent of Florida Power & Light customers lost electricit­y with the average outage lasting 2.3 days. That’s compared with 75 percent of customers who lost electricit­y during Wilma when the average outage was 5.4 days.

In Palm Beach County, more than 290,000 people were urged to evacuate coastal areas and from around Lake Okeechobee. About 17,000 stayed in shelters.

But while Irma knocked over trees with gusts that reached 91 mph at Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport, homes were largely spared.

“We got lucky. We got very lucky, again,” said Bill Johnson, head of Palm Beach County’s emergency management division. “But some day our luck is going to run out.”

 ?? LANNIS WATERS / THE PALM BEACH POST ?? Winds from Hurricane Irma push water from the Intracoast­al Waterway over the sea wall along Flagler Drive in West Palm Beach on Sept. 10.
LANNIS WATERS / THE PALM BEACH POST Winds from Hurricane Irma push water from the Intracoast­al Waterway over the sea wall along Flagler Drive in West Palm Beach on Sept. 10.
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