Forum:2008 Atlantic hurricane season

No activities?
I know it's already November, but it's been about 2 weeks from the last TD and TS/canes and few days from the last INVEST and even AoIs. Anyone? Storm&#39;s Eye 02:25, 2 November 2008 (UTC)
 * I don't know that I would object too loudly to a quiet month. September was bad enough.--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 05:12, 2 November 2008 (UTC)

AoI: SW Caribbean
Now, the lull is over. I was about to post this earlier because most models predicted development, but now it's at medium-risk on NHC TWO. Could drift northwest, then north, then northeast. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 23:46, 2 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Wow, quite a turnaround. A couple days ago, the whole planet was deader than Elvis, now we've got Polo in the EPAC and this little guy in the Caribbean. This one, however, is gonna have to stay stationary for a little while longer because it's running out of water. That North American continent is looming like the Grim Reaper. -- SkyFury 06:13, 3 November 2008 (UTC)

93L.INVEST
NRL's calling it 93L. NHC says that it is nearly stationary, and that "UPPER-LEVEL WINDS ARE FAVORABLE FOR SOME DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SYSTEM OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS." We'll see. --Patteroast 08:24, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
 * The GFDL and HWRF have both had strong storms in their recent runs, although the most recent GFDL quits while the storm is still 56 knots (as in, the GFDL has the system remaining stationary over the Honduras, which is really bad). The SHIPS model has not been very active on the system. Most models have picked up the system and done something with it. The strangest model is the NAM, which goes insane and makes a very-intense Paloma in the middle of the Caribbean. Squarethecircle 18:28, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
 * HWRF delveops a strong cat. 2! 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 22:14, 3 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Um... HWRF and GFDL are both showing a cat. 3 landfall on Cuba, now. Strangely enough, I checked CMC to see what crazy stuff it did with it, but it doesn't seem to recognize it at all. --Patteroast 07:40, 4 November 2008 (UTC)
 * HWRF is suggesting a major hurricane strike on Haiti! 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 20:38, 4 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Up to high risk. And a recon. Storm&#39;s Eye 13:27, 5 November 2008 (UTC)

"SATELLITE IMAGES AND SURFACE OBSERVATIONS INDICATE THAT A TROPICAL DEPRESSION MAY BE FORMING IN THE SOUTHWESTERN CARIBBEAN SEA ABOUT 150 MILES SOUTHEAST OF CABO GRACIAS A DIOS ON THE BORDER OF NICARAGUA AND HONDURAS. ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS APPEARS FAVORABLE FOR FURTHER DEVELOPMENT AND AN AIR FORCE RESERVE HURRICANE HUNTER AIRCRAFT IS ENROUTE TO DETERMINE IF A DEPRESSION HAS FORMED. THIS SYSTEM IS EXPECTED TO MOVE SLOWLY TO THE NORTH OR NORTHWEST FOR THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS." Oh dear. Only two of several models don't give this one a name and given the forecast track, its easy to see why they would think that. HWFI is going nuts with this one, taking it to 105 kts in just 84 hrs, but it's the outlier. Most take it to between 50 and 80 kts. This season is already one of the most active on record, and a Paloma would bring 2008's total to 17 (counting the SC storm in Sep. that should get upgraded in postanalysis). 17 would make it the sixth most active season on record by itself (after 2005, 1933, 1887, 1995, 1969). -- SkyFury 19:36, 5 November 2008 (UTC)

Tropical Depression Seventeen
Official from NHC. Forecast to become a hurricane in 48 hours... --Patteroast 21:17, 5 November 2008 (UTC)
 * The NHC are taking it a wee bit conservative here. They don't want to get this one wrong - however, even considering using the SHIPS model at this point is absolutely nuts. The SHIPS model does not take into account at all the anti-cyclone that will be present over the system and the good sea surface temperatures that it will be encountering - thus, the SHIPS may be biasing the NHC's prediction more towards the conservative side. The HWRF and GFDL might be considered too bullish, but both have done much, much better than the statistical models this year, and, in my opinion, to go 25 knots off them must mean that the NHC is not completely confident on any specific forecast (which is not unlikely - a major in November? They can't get behind something so absurd unless they really know that that's how it's going to be). Squarethecircle 22:10, 5 November 2008 (UTC)

Tropical Storm Paloma
And now we have her. Storm&#39;s Eye 08:50, 6 November 2008 (UTC)


 * This looks to be heading straight for Cuba, and it could be a cat 3 or (god forbid) a cat 4 when it reaches the coast. Dear god Cuba has been absolutely battered this year! The weather gods have been very unkind to the Caribbean. With an anticyclone developing over the system, very warm SSTs, and low shear, conditions are very unusually favorable for early November and this thing has the potential to develop into a monster. Let's just hope that this doesn't happen, or that if it does it gets sheared apart before reaching Cuba and we have a nice pretty storm over the middle of the Caribbean that doesn't hit land at full strength. But right now this looks pretty unlikely. Bob rulz 09:52, 6 November 2008 (UTC)
 * A 16-8-5 season would be incredible. But you're right - Cuba cannot take this much abuse. Already, around 5 billion dollars in damage has been done to Cuba in the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season, and with another potential major coming their way, it's not looking good for the Cubans right now. Hopefully the loss of life will stay down, and Paloma will turn out to be just a weak hurricane and hit an unpopulated area. That's the best we can really hope for at the moment. And yes, Bob, I agree, the synoptic set up is not looking good for Cuba, even this late in the year. For one unlucky moment, an anticyclone has set up a nearly shear-less environment for Paloma - the fifth major of the season is not out of reach. SSTs are not a factor in preventing development - they are plenty warm enough to support a category three or four storm. Dry air has not yet come into play - but with the moisture in the area and the anti-cyclone present, that may not be a threat to the integrity of the storm. On the subject, by the way, how many November majors have their been? I know Lenny as the big name, but what other monsters have sprung up at this time of year? Squarethecircle 13:26, 6 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Should be 17-8-5. That thing that hit South Carolina back in September was at the very least subtropical. Paloma's looking ugly right now. I can almost see an eye starting to form and it hasn't even begun to fight yet. That shear increase in about 60-84 hrs could end up being rather timely for Cuba. -- SkyFury 17:24, 6 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Strengthening steadily, shouldn't take too much longer to become a hurricane. As for similar November storm, in 2001 Hurricane Michelle formed around the same time, in the same place, had a similar track, and made a cat. 4 landfall in Cuba and was retired... --Patteroast 18:41, 6 November 2008 (UTC)

Hurricane Paloma
Wow, that was a bit quicker than expected. Check out that eye, though! That thing wasn't there even half an hour ago! Pretty impressive. undefinedundefined 00:01, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Wow, that's amazing. I think this will indeed become a cat. 3. Remember that rapid strengthening still can occur at this time of year, and Omar was predicted to strengthen only to cat. 2 just like this one, and it became a cat. 3/4. This season is indeed a true record breaker. GFDL gives Grand Cayman Island category four winds, so anyone in the path of this storm should prepare. What an irony, "Paloma" means dove in Spanish! Also, that storm in North Carolina back in September might not be the only one, there's this subtropical-looking storm near New England, it has an eye and symmetry, and it might be a warm seclusion (see below), and you could probably find better images than I can, but the only thing that system lacks in becoming tropical is warmer water and colder cloud tops. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 00:14, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Just as a note, the NHC are more liberal with awarding storm status these days - if a storm isn't listed, and you think it's subtrop or trop, you can give up hope right there and then. It appears that Paloma is undergoing a stint of rapid intensification - it could easily become a major at this rate. I somehow doubt that the storm will last long enough to intensify to a category four, but it is recognized that a major hurricane is quite possible (and may be likely) at this point in time. In my opinion, it shouldn't be a question - the dynamical models, set-up, and the current intensification trend all point to a category 3 hurricane. Unfortunately, Cuba should bear the brunt of the landfall - closing out what is already their worst year in terms of storms in recent memory. Squarethecircle 01:44, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Jesus, that is all bad. 40 to 65 knots in 10 hrs is not good. At that rate, it could be a Category 4 by tomorrow afternoon, and as some of you may know, I'm not given to apocryphal predictions. This one's smelling way to much like Michelle in 2001. Small little bitch, but that's not going to make Cuba feel much better. They better hope that shear arrives before Paloma kicks the shit out of them. Damn, I tell you just when you think the season's over stuff like this happens. -- SkyFury 02:20, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Here we are, at the end of one of the most unreasonably damaging seasons of all time, as well as one of the more active ones. All four of this season's majors could be category four hurricanes (as noted by the NHC in their discussions for Bertha), and we could be set up to tie the record of 5 category four hurricanes in a single year (though this is quite unlikely). A complete reversal of the last two seasons - the ACE was well above the mean, all three categories were well above the average, and the United States was hammered, as was Cuba and Hispaniola. We are close to having a major in each of five consecutive months, which is a record that will almost certainly never be broken. Tracy's record for the smallest maximum wind field based on gale force winds was demolished by tropical storm Marco, which for all practical purposes barely even existed. 2008 kept up with last year in terms of depression to hurricane strengthening - multiple times we have come close to or about tied Lorenzo's record. As Paloma threatens a hurricane-ransacked Cuba, I can say one thing for sure - this is a season we should not, cannot, forget. Squarethecircle 03:47, 7 November 2008 (UTC)

On a more Paloma related note, a small eye has formed, and Paloma could very well continue to intensify at this rate. AF301 is on route, so we should have the storm's intensity in not too long. Squarethecircle 04:12, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * On the same note, our friends at NHC now forecast Paloma to become Major #5 by tomorrow morning.--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 18:11, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Paloma now looks much more organized, with a very well defined structure and a clearing eye. Recon is in the storm, and their reports continue to be higher, so it may be just this evening that Paloma becomes a major hurricane. Squarethecircle 20:58, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Now a cat. 2. The models are massively dissagreeing on what will happen after it hits the Caymans, some models predict it to affect Florida or enter the Gulf, but it should have been weakened and sheared by then. Most models are hinting that its remnants, if there's anything left, could affect S. Ontario. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 21:47, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * It's November. Once Paloma leaves Cuba, it will be totally obliterated by the intense shear that is associated with the November jet stream. Though the models may be correct in that it would turn around after exiting Cuba, it will not exist long enough to make that turn. In other words, the point is completely moot. Squarethecircle 22:17, 7 November 2008 (UTC)

A pinhole eye has developed, and the rate of intensification is almost significant enough (not sure) to attain the label of "explosive intensification". Derek Ortt, who you may or may not know, depending on your associations, states that the satellite presentation is similar to that of a category 4 (quote from post on Storm2k). Update at 23:20, 7 November 2008 (UTC), recon has reported multiple 100+ knot SFMR readings. Squarethecircle 23:16, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Grand Cayman is getting beat to hell. That northern eyewall is due ashore in a couple hours. If anything, Paloma's rate of intensification has picked up. This thing will just not stop. Paloma's living rather dangerously, cruising along the edge of oblivion, with 45 knot shear just a step to its west. It's almost like she's laughing in the face of danger. November hurricanes tend to be somewhat gung-ho. Now its a major hurricane and I don't think it's going to stop until that shear or Cuba or both make it stop. -- SkyFury 23:52, 7 November 2008 (UTC)

Major Hurricane Paloma
Actually, Grand Cayman is only getting TS winds because of the extremely small wind radius of the storm. Satellite presentation continues to improve - this storm is bombing out. Squarethecircle 23:53, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Crap, I think this storm might turn out to be quite a bit stronger than was initially thought. Certainly, the season will end with a gigantic freaking bang. On another note, since the storm is rapidly deepening, the shear might not even be able to get to the core before the storm makes landfall on Cuba, although since it is traveling extremely slowly it probably will weaken somewhat. It all depends on how strong Paloma becomes - and I would not put a November record out of the question. T-numbers are now 6.0 - equivalent to a category 4 hurricane, though since the winds had not caught up as of the last recon report, they will probably not go over 110 knots, if that (thought they will certainly increase to at least 105 knots). I fear for the Cubans - I mean, just when they thought the year was freaking over... Squarethecircle 01:13, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * I am surprised at the NHC, and actually sort of disgusted. Recon data was received hours ago while the storm was undergoing extraordinarily rapid intensification, and satellite images have much improved from then. I think the NHC will be in for a "Surprise" when the 1 AM recon gets in (which reminds me, how are they going to do that update? The recon will be simultaneous with the intended release time of the 10A advisory, so it will be hard to maneuver that around so they release the best possible data - my thinking is the intention for potential 1:15 special advisory. And, for the first time ever, I am staying up until one o' clock for a tropical cyclone.) Squarethecircle 03:14, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Up to 105 knots and not long after I said Grand Cayman was getting beat to hell, a journalist on the island phoned into the Weather Channel reporting 80 mph wind gusts despite the eyewall being at least an hour away. I have never seen a storm undergo two seperate periods of rapid intensification in such a short span like this. It really hasn't slowed down since it reached tropical storm strength. This is pretty incredible. Paloma's picking off the Caymans one by one. Little Cayman and Cayman Brac are next. And Square, seeing as the November record is 155 mph (Lenny), I would put it out of the question based simply on time. And 1 am? Are you serious? That's a normal night for me. I stayed up until at least 3:30...CDT...watching Ike come ashore (and boy was it worth it). -- SkyFury 08:02, 8 November 2008 (UTC)

Urgh! SHORTLY BEFORE 500 AM EST...DATA FROM AN AIR FORCE RESERVE HURRICANE HUNTER AIRCRAFT INDICATED THAT '''MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS IN HURRICANE PALOMA HAVE INCREASED TO 135 MPH...215 KM/HR. PALOMA IS NOW AN EXTREMELY DANGEROUS CATEGORY FOUR HURRICANE ON THE SAFFIR-SIMPSON SCALE.''' This is supposed to be NOVEMBER! Jake52 10:28, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * 000
 * WTNT62 KNHC 081009
 * TCUAT2
 * HURRICANE PALOMA TROPICAL CYCLONE UPDATE
 * NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL  AL172008
 * 508 AM EST SAT NOV 08 2008
 * Dude, Eric, cut me some slack, I'm 14! I had trouble staying up until 2 last night with caffeine. Also, seeing as Paloma's intensity has not matched its T-numbers (which were suggesting Paloma could have continued intensifying to beyond 120 knots significantly earlier last night), Paloma has no window to make the strongest storm of the season, let alone Lenny - in not too many hours, shear should stop intensification entirely (and, depending on the strength of the core at that time, begin to rapidly reverse it). Regardless - the storm is still intensifying, and it could get a little stronger if that trend continues. Also- this is really a beautiful storm for 115 knots, check out the visible! Best looking November storm since Lenny at the same wind speed. Squarethecircle 13:40, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * (edit conflict)Wow. I'm totally shocked. Not only has Palmoa set an all-time record for the 2008 season (a major in 5 separate months), now it could potentially even become a cat. 5, as some WeatherUnderground members are predicting. If the storm survives land and shear, it could affect Florida. If you wanted to see some of the biggest hurricane surprises of your life, it'd be 2008, not 2005. If you are in the path of this storm, pray. Models are now diverging on its possible path, at the worst time possible. Slow-moving storms are notoriously hard to predict, and this is a slow-moving storm. CMC predicts it to miss Cuba altogether and hit Tampa Bay...always the outlier. However, anything is possible at this point. Maybe I was right in predicting an impossibly active and devastating season. I will be watching the 10 am advisory, which comes out in about an hour, VERY closely. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 13:50, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Hehe, those Wundies don't know what they're talking about. It maybe had a shot 8 hours ago IF and ONLY IF you were going solely by T-numbers (which have stayed on a similar level since then). Oh, BTW, the most recent 8 o' clock VDM has the storm at 939 hPa, 134 knot flight wind, and a somewhat suspicious 128 knot SFMR reading (since the area from which this measurement was taken did not have nearly as strong winds at the flight level). And now up to 120 knots, as per the seven o' clock 12A update (plus 943 hPa pressure). Squarethecircle 14:06, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Recon suggests that, though not finding the strongest winds, and missing the eye, Paloma has peaked - Cuba can only hope that the ERC and shear gets to it before landfall. Squarethecircle 16:26, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Update - recon supports a storm with winds between 105 and 110 knots, which, give the trend that is occurring, appears to be very good news for the Cubans. Squarethecircle 17:27, 8 November 2008 (UTC)

Update - Nevermind, NOAA3 just found 134 knot flight level winds, about 120 knots at the surface. SFMR was not available during the pass. Squarethecircle 17:37, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * On same eyewall pass, outbound, unflagged SFMR supported the 120 knot value - Paloma has bottomed out, but the ERC (the most likely cause of the small amount of weakening in terms of pressure) has not yet begun to affect its intensity. Cuba still has several hours for weakening, but any hope of a non-major at landfall now appears to be thrown out of the window. Squarethecircle 17:50, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * At this point, there's pretty much nothing I can say that is cheery in regards to the situation faced by the Cubans. If this is another 1932, they're just completely and utterly screwed. Squarethecircle 20:54, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Well, this would be the worst hurricane in this area of Camaguey since King of 1950 but if it was a cat. 4 at landfall then the worst since the great hurricane of 1932. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 23:32, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * 110 knot landfall - Cuba got away with a BCS, but 110 knots, even weakening, is going to hurt. Now we have to go through the long and painful process of waiting for damage reports to come out - surely, they can't be good. Squarethecircle 00:35, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Wind gusts of 155 mph reported in Cuba! That would rank among the ten greatest surface gusts ever officially recorded on land during a hurricane. Sustained winds reported in the ninetys. This is one hell of a storm. I agree that the destruction in Cuba could be quite severe. There are already reports of significant damage coming in. However, Cuba has seen some of the Atlantic Basin's most catastrophic storms (the 1932 storm killed 3,100 people; Flora killed around 1,800 in 1963) so Cuba is nothing if not experienced. That said, I'm not expecting good news when I wake up tomorrow morning. -- SkyFury 04:43, 9 November 2008 (UTC)

God, I'm ashamed of myself. It's been so quiet for so long that even though I knew about this monstrous November storm, I wasn't keeping close track of it. In fact, I forgot about it for the second day in a row until I saw the news article about Paloma making landfall in Cuba. *shakes head* Normally I would be plying the storm2k boards looking up every ounce of information on the storm and tracking its every move and would be on here making periodic comments about how amazing and horrible it is, yet I forget about it! Bah. And on another note, could this year possibly be any worse for Cuba? What's next, uber December cat 5 monster? Bob rulz 09:20, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Jeesh, then we'd know the end is near. That doesn't even happen in the West Pacific but once every blue moon (like thrice in 50 years). Paloma was incredible. It just kept getting stronger and stronger and stronger. I weakened a bit before landfall though, which appears to have made the difference. The Atlantic likes to wait until we're not looking to something earthshattering. And dear God go to bed! 09:20 UTC is 2:20 am in Salt Lake City. I'm batshit crazy and even I don't stay up that late on a weeknight. -- SkyFury 05:02, 11 November 2008 (UTC)

Hurricane Paloma (Second shot)
Dropped to a Cat 1. Storm&#39;s Eye 09:46, 9 November 2008 (UTC)

Tropical Storm Paloma (Second shot)
Down again. Storm&#39;s Eye 12:38, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Winds over 155 mph were apparently recorded in the Caymans. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 18:58, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Cuba too. ATL record though is 180 ('38 Long Island Express). West Pacific has reportedly sniffed 200. Just another one of a long list of reasons why I love the West Pacific. -- SkyFury 05:07, 11 November 2008 (UTC)

Tropical Depression Paloma (technically first time)
Now downgraded to a tropical depression - it looks like Paloma will not make it through the day. Squarethecircle 20:40, 9 November 2008 (UTC)

Remnant low
Yes she is. Storm&#39;s Eye 15:34, 10 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Burst of convection over the COC, which is now near small cayman and moving W. Not saying it'll develop as its in some reallllllly dry air but there is a dry high over it. 5% chance. -Winter123 08:04, 12 November 2008 (UTC)
 * 5% is too high by several orders of magnitude. Shear has already set in - this storm has no chance in any way of redeveloping. Squarethecircle 20:39, 12 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Remnants currently making landfall at that point of the FL panhandle. Amazing its still recognizable after like 6 days of 40kt shear and 2 days over cuba. Nasty Nor-easter or something hot on its heels. -Winter123 07:58, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

AoI: NE of Cape Hatteras
Many models are predicting it will develop, could be extratropical or subtropical. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 20:53, 4 November 2008 (UTC)
 * It had a well-defined eye-like feature, and it's still looking pretty intense. This might be a warm seclusion, but it really does remind me of the September storm, and you should try to find an image, because this storm has real symmetry. Expected to drift northwest. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 00:16, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Big ass nor'easter, but nothing tropical and with the water temperatures up there, I'm not surprised. -- SkyFury 02:49, 7 November 2008 (UTC)

94L. INVEST
I could have posted an AoI almost a week ago, but decided not to because it was so far north. Now, to my amazement, it's an invest! 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 23:23, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Been watching this for a few days. On http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/TROP/trop-atl.html but not NRL or NHC. There are at least one of these a year (this year they have been like 5) and they ignore them just cause theyre not a threat to land. its BS cause this is clearly a STS on satellite. -Winter123 23:48, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * No, it's not an STS. It hasn't existed as a potential STS system long enough to be considered for upgrade. The low is not very deep, and the frontal plus core analysis is inconclusive. Satellite is the absolute WORST way to determine whether or not a system is subtropical - if you looked at a polar low (or a medicane) without more information on satellite, you could easily confuse it with something tropical. Also, if there had been "like five", then why do I only remember one, and why don't I (or the NHC, for that matter) think it was a subtropical storm? Squarethecircle 01:35, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * NHC is now talking about it: "AN AREA OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS HAS DEVELOPED IN ASSOCIATION WITH A NON-TROPICAL LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM LOCATED ABOUT 700 MILES SOUTHWEST OF THE AZORES ISLANDS. ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS APPEAR SOMEWHAT FAVORABLE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF A SUBTROPICAL CYCLONE DURING THE NEXT DAY OR TWO IF THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY PERSISTS NEAR THE LOW PRESSURE CENTER." --Patteroast 01:59, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Winter, I'm afraid I'm going to have to side with Square on this one; I think the BS lies with you on this particular occasion. In September, however, NHC did miss a storm and in August, 2007 a very impressive invest occured in the Caribbean (shortly before the formation of Dean). As for this invest, it does indeed bear watching, though I think its chances are about 50-50. -- SkyFury 05:00, 9 November 2008 (UTC)

dead anyway - Winter123 16:18, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Yeah, the convection went away over night, though the NHC hasn't completely abandoned it. Also, they did have a very good reason for not upgrading that storm in September - until just about landfall, the storm was associated with a weak warm front to the north, making it just barely ineligible for the status of tropical (if not for the front, it would have been considered tropical given the data that was given by the recon investigating it). Thus, it came down to whether or not a storm that was tropical for perhaps less than the time between full advisories, if it was indeed tropical (as I'm sure there were a few people who denied it), and the fact is that the NHC does not upgrade storms unless they've been shown to be tropical for a somewhat substantial period of time, and when they will be tropical for a somewhat substantial period of time (one of the main reasons why they "miss" these kinds of storms, along with the fact that they are so borderline that their status may be ambiguous). It may or may not have been tropical, but it was not considered an officially NHC recognized tropical storm. Post-season analysis may reveal that the system was not related to the front, or that it was unrelated to the front for a substantial period of time before landfall, in which case it will most likely be upgraded to Unnamed Tropical Storm 11. Squarethecircle 17:22, 9 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Satellite evidence has since shown that it had a warm core for the approximately twelve hours leading up to landfall and was entirely detached from the frontal boundary. It was a storm. The reason I think NHC didn't upgrade it was because that out of the blue calling it a 55 knot tropical storm within hours of landfall will gale warnings already in place would've caused confusion and freaked people out unnecessarily. It had already been affecting land for the better part of a day at that point. This is similar to the reason why the Perfect Storm wasn't named. ...And for anyone confused, we're talking about the September storm that struck South Carolina. -- SkyFury 05:16, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Satellite evidence cannot be used to determine the attachment of a front to a system. Squarethecircle 01:00, 12 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Also, obs showed the system had the front attached almost immediately prior to landfall. See this thread for detail and analysis: http://www.storm2k.org/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?f=54&t=103346&start=320 . As I have said prior, it is a technical point - the storm was associated enough to be considered not tropical, given the NHC's conservatism with borderline systems (i.e., 93l pre-Paloma). Squarethecircle 01:07, 12 November 2008 (UTC)

This is the storm near the azores right? (well more like 400 miles SSW of them) It's still here, with strong convecetion over the center. Completely alone and detached from any front. It's tropical. However from satellite i can tell its not nearly strong enough. -Winter123 08:07, 12 November 2008 (UTC)
 * In retrospective, the storm on the twelfth did not have significant convection, and its core was somewhat cold. The system was surrounded by a larger frontal low. It was unclassifiable as a tropical system. Squarethecircle 22:53, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

95L. INVEST
Up on Navy site.79.73.68.46 01:41, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Low prob by the NHC. Storm&#39;s Eye 06:21, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
 * How was this an invest? There's like 3 small thunderstorms and heavy shear. -Winter123 07:59, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
 * It was medium risk at the time on NHC who were saying only marginally favourable conditions for some further development. 212.248.167.68 10:47, 14 November 2008 (UTC)
 * It looks like pre-Paloma, but for one thing - pre-Paloma had a virtually shear-less environment and fairly high SSTs. This invest is not only heading into a fairly cool area, but more importantly, it's heading into an incredible amount of shear - I don't understand what the NHC sees for the future of this storm. Squarethecircle 13:33, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

Also, to add insult to injury, the storm is no longer picked up by ANY recommendable model (Not even the CMC makes this a low!). Squarethecircle 13:37, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

AoI: South of Windward Islands
A SURFACE TROUGH OF LOW PRESSURE LOCATED ABOUT 300 MILES EAST OF THE SOUTHERN WINDWARD ISLANDS IS PRODUCING A LARGE AREA OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. WHILE PRESSURES ARE LOW IN THIS AREA...UPPER-LEVEL WINDS ARE NOT FAVORABLE FOR DEVELOPMENT. LOW PROB by NHC, not named by the NRL. ??? Storm&#39;s Eye 04:38, 15 November 2008 (UTC)
 * That happens frequently. Also - though the shear is decreasing, it is not decreasing nearly fast enough for this thing to survive. I expect it to be ripped apart fairly soon. Squarethecircle 17:34, 15 November 2008 (UTC)

96L.INVEST
NHC has an area just north of Panama at medium risk, and models are initializing it as 96L. GFDL seems to think it has a shot at becoming a major hurricane, although other models fail to form anything at all. --Patteroast 02:27, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Hell, if it can form in 20-30 knot wind shear I'm not in a position to judge the thing. Also, FWIW, HWRF produces a small TS. Squarethecircle 04:13, 24 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Both of those solutions are incorrect. Regardless of its prior chances, this storm is now dead. Squarethecircle 20:59, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Nevertheless, GFDL still takes it to a cat. 1, HWRF takes it to a TS, and LBAR takes it to Haiti, even with the shear. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 21:44, 25 November 2008 (UTC)

97L.INVEST
Another invest has formed, this time in cooler waters near the Azores. Expected to move into cooler water, but it looks impressive on satelite, appears to be subtropical. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 14:08, 28 November 2008 (UTC)

Program for use in tropical cyclone QPF
..but weather weenies might like it too. heheheh  It's a series of scripts that are run in-house through a GUI named cliqr (http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/tropical/rain/web/cliqr.html), and it runs for all ATCF-entered invests. It shows the rainfall graphics for the systems that most closely match ongoing invests, with greater weight placed on location, size (ROCI), and forward motion than the other parameters. If nothing else, you can look at the list of matches and see where they went. Thegreatdr 23:41, 6 August 2008 (UTC)
 * Ooh, grown-up toys, yay! -- SkyFury 05:13, 7 August 2008 (UTC)

Retirements at a glance
So, now with six named storms, it seems linke we can discuss retirements now. Here is my take so far: What are your thoughts? 69.92.37.140 00:57, 20 August 2008 (UTC)
 * Arthur - 10% - damage not severe
 * Bertha - 7% - minimal damage
 * Cristobal - 5% - foregettable, hardly caused any damage
 * Dolly - 60% - caused over $1 billion in damage, and 21 deaths
 * Eduoard - 10% - damage total unknown, but probably not severe
 * Fay - 75% - caused over 100 deaths, severe damage possible. Interestingly, this could be the first time the same letter in the same list is retired twice, as Fay replaced Fran for the 2002 season.
 * I'm having a hard time corroborating the 100+ deaths from Fay. Most of the sources I'm finding are suggesting 14, and that the original count from Haiti was greatly exaggerated.  I'd wait till damage figures are in, but right now I'd put Fay at more like 25% based on what I know right now.  I think I'd also nudge Dolly down to 50%, as the death toll/damage estimates are not exceptionally high and the affected countries (US and Mexico) seem to be somewhat conservative with nominating names for retirement. Albireo 15:59, 20 August 2008 (UTC)
 * By the way, Fay did not replace Fran in the 2002 season, it replaced it in the 1996 season, so this wouldn't be the first time. Here are my estimates:
 * Arthur: 4% - It wasn't that bad, and storms cause mudslides all the time in Central America.
 * Bertha: 3% - Although it broke a few records, damage in Bermuda wasn't severe.
 * Cristobal: 2% - Damage minimal, although this is the only storm so far to follow the Gulf Stream, and it caused some flooding in Nova Scotia, but not much.
 * Dolly: 49% - I'm not going to place any bets on this storm, as damage wasn't really that bad, and most flooding occured inland while it was a depression. However, it is still a devastating storm, which caused over 1 billion in damage, so it has a good chance nevertheless.
 * Edouard: 6% - Although hurricane watches were originally issued, it never became a hurricane and was really not that bad.
 * Fay: 29% 43% - Damages in the US and Cuba were minimal, storms kill dozens in Haiti all the time and not get retired, the bus crash in the Dominican Republic was indirect, but each country does have some chance of retiring it, and it's not done yet. Update: severe flooding in Florida and other places.
 * Gustav: (tenative) 78% 77% 80% - Based on the current forecast, but still too early to tell. Update: over 60 deaths in Haiti, massive evacuation initiated in Louisiana.2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 00:53, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
 * Hanna: (tenative) 52% 70% 81% - It hasn't done anything yet, but I dunno, I just have a bad feeling about this one... Update: Nearly 140 540 deaths in Haiti.
 * Ike: (tenative) 80% 94% - I know it hasn't done anything yet, but it could seriously wreck parts of Florida and the Gulf. Update: Massive devastation in Texas.2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 00:32, 6 September 2008 (UTC)
 * Josephine: (tenative) 21% 6% 1% - It's way too early to tell, and it looks like a dud, but there is a chance it may affect Bermuda and Atlantic Canada. Update: Dissapated, but remnants are still existing. Update: Only some breezes in Cape Verde to speak of.
 * Kyle: 10% - Wasn't that bad, although its precursor system did impact Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, and it hit Canada as a hurricane.
 * Laura: 1% - Aside from some heavy snow and wind in Great Britain, nothing.
 * Marco: 2% - Record-breaker, but it was too small to do much damage.
 * Nana: 0% - Uhh, no.
 * Omar: 39% - It passed through the Virgin islands quite strongly as a cat. 4 (?), but few areas experienced hurricane-force winds, although there was some damage.

2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 00:32, 6 September 2008 (UTC) 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 17:05, 29 August 2008 (UTC)
 * So, there you have it. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 22:12, 20 August 2008 (UTC)
 * Updated. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 23:53, 2 November 2008 (UTC)

Just a comment on the question of whether a name with the same letter has been retired from the same list more than once... it's happened multiple times already. Allen > Andrew (x2) > Alex. Alicia > Allison (x3) > Andrea. Frederic > Fabian (x4) > Fred (upcoming). And most strikingly the back-to-back Marilyn > Michelle > Melissa. --Patteroast 07:18, 21 August 2008 (UTC)
 * When was the last time a tropical storm was retired? One and only Allison? Seems Fay has way to go to reach that. However, if the track swifts a bit more to the south Big Easy might get in troubles. --213.155.231.26 21:06, 21 August 2008 (UTC)

You took my title. Jake52 01:27, 23 August 2008 (UTC)
 * Arthur: 5%. 9 deaths total and a fair bit of damage. Neither of these are really substantial criterion for retiring a storm.
 * Bertha: 2%. It was a certainly notable tropical cyclone, but that's all it has to its name is notability. It only caused three deaths, and none of these were in Bermuda.
 * Cristobal: 1%. Honestly. The thing did negligibly little. If Chantal wasn't retired last year (and it wasn't), Cristobal stands no chance at all.
 * Dolly: 45%. This goes off estimated damages being equal to or less than final. If the estimates are greater than actual, it's just a 25%. Fair death toll.
 * Edouard: 1%. Ladies and gentlemen...what on Earth did this thing do?
 * Fay: 10%, possibly higher. Fair death toll. Will wait for damage reports.
 * Gustav: 88%. Made a mess of the Caribbean. High death toll and damages.
 * Hanna: 85%. What on EARTH happened here?!? This thing ALONE killed more people than ALL OF 2007!!! I hate to do this, but it's got lower chances than Gustav for the sadly unavoidable reason that it's Haiti. But still, axe it.
 * Ike: ??
 * Josephine: 0%. Negligible.
 * Arthur: 3%: Nothing out of the ordinary, your bog standard storm hitting a Central America coast.
 * Bertha: 12%: Broke a record or two, scared Bermuda. Not much damage though
 * Cristobal: 2%: What did it do again?
 * Dolly: 34%: Whacked south Texas.
 * Edouard: 10%: Made Houston sit up and take note. Didn't do much in the end though.
 * Fay: 39% 59%: Pounded Florida with severe flooding in places. Damage in Carribean was nothing unusual. New Orleans a little lucky not to get a stronger hit due to it staying over the Florida Panhandle.
 * Gustav: 62%: Gave New Orleans a scare, but caused flooding to the West. Damage in Haiti
 * Hanna: 46%: Damage in Haiti & Bahamas, worsened by...
 * Ike: 100%: Prob retired in the Carribean anyway, looks like it's going to be very bad on US Landfall. Death toll set to be higher than Katrina?
 * Josephine: 0%: It existed. Not much more I can say about it. - Salak 04:01, 26 August 2008 (UTC), UPDATED: 01:01, 13 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Eric's divine and always superior pontification:
 * Arthur: 10% - just for catching NHC with its pants around its ankles...and setting a really cool record too.
 * Bertha: 9% - I've always wanted to visit Bermuda, apparently Bertha felt the same way. She had a jolly old time out there for about a month. What is it about Berthas that make them so hard to kill?
 * Cristobal: 4% - Ooh, a storm brushing by the Outer Banks and doing absolutely nothing! Gold star for originality, Cris.
 * Dolly: 43% - Kicked the shit out of South Padre but they came out of it reasonably well.
 * Ed: 6% - nuisance storm. Pissed on a couple people in North Texas but that's about it.
 * Fay: 34% - I think Fay's raised the sea level of the Gulf of Mexico about 8 feet. Pretty much every county in the state of Florida got at least two inches of rain from this thing.
 * Gustav: 87% - Gustav gave Cuba a shellacking and those floods in Haiti were really bad. Louisiana actually fared the best of the three. With 125 deaths and $10 billion in damage, I'd be stunned if Gustav isn't retired.
 * Hanna: 85% - Man, the sitation in Haiti has turned into an epic catastrophe. This is Haiti's worst hit since Jeanne. Gonaives is a hellhole, simply put. If 535 dead doesn't earn retirement, then the WMO needs to be lined up and shot.
 * Ike: 92% - Wow, what a storm! Very bad floods again again hit the Greater Antilles hard. It has just been a disasterous season for them. The situation in Texas is not much better right now. The destruction on the Bolivar Peninsula is epic. Ike effectively wiped four towns from the face of the Earth. This is turning out to be the storm of the season. It's been a long time since we've seen three (four if you count Fay) consecutive devastating storms like this. '04 didn't do it, '05 didn't do it. This is unbelievable.
 * Josephine: 2% - At least the Verdes got a nice breeze.
 * Kyle: 19% - Left Puerto Rico all soggy and knocked Nova Scotia around a bit.
 * Laura: 1% - Gave me something to look at for a couple of days.
 * Marco: 7% - Soaked Veracruz pretty good. Also, I have never seen a tropical cyclone with a windfield this small. It's incredible. Many supercell thunderstorms get larger than Marco. Could possibly be a record.
 * Nana: 0% - Dud of duds
 * Omar: 17% - Raised hell in the Caribbean, but its bark was worse than its bite.
 * Paloma: 33% - Dear God, what a storm! A fitting capstone to a helluva season. Luckily, the damage in Cuba was not as bad as was feared.
 * Will revise as the season goes along. -- SkyFury 04:47, 25 August 2008 (UTC)


 * I think that Fay should be retired... if any of you lived in Orlando you'd understand the extent of the flooding that occured. Lakes that were 3 feet low a week ago are about 8 feet too high now and 4 landfalls... I cant' wait till the next one! 65.244.189.218 09:08, 25 August 2008 (UTC)


 * Having just looked at photos of Florida after Fay, I've upped my figure for its retirement. I've heard quite little about the impact of it here (UK) though; think I've seen it mentioned in the news briefly twice. - Salak 03:58, 26 August 2008 (UTC)


 * I disagree. I don't think it should be retired and I definately don't think it will be retired. The flooding wasn't severe enough or widespread enough, nor did it cause enough damage. The fact that it wasn't a hurricane doesn't help. Tropical Storm Bret in 1993 killed 124 people in Venezuela in catastrophic floods (the exact same number as Ivan) and wasn't retired. -- SkyFury 16:38, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

My own totally non-scientific predictions thus far: Really what it all boils down to, for me, are the criteria upon which storms get retired. Sure, they may have broken a record or been a nuisance, but really these are not things that storms get retired for. To date, I'd not be surprised if no storms are retired - but with September looming and Gustav looking dangerous, I'm sure that sentiment will change. Albireo 16:28, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
 * Arthur: 0%
 * Bertha: 0%
 * Cristobal: 0% - Let's face it, all three had pretty negligible impact in terms of damage/fatalities, and these are what get storms retired. No sense in giving them a piddly 1 or 2% chance when it ain't gonna happen.
 * Dolly: 40% - Relatively high damage but nothing eye popping.
 * Edouard: 0% - As above.
 * Fay: 33% - Helluva wet storm, but I'm not willing to up the odds unless some striking damage figures come out.
 * Gustav: 100% - Based on damages to Cuba, large-scale evacuations and disruptions. Damage estimates over $20B, hard to imagine not retiring this one.
 * Hanna: 95% - Over 500 dead, she'd have to pull a Gordon not to be retired.
 * Ike: 100% - Damage estimates over $25B mean Ike is a shoe-in for retirement.
 * Josephine: 0% - Total dud.
 * Kyle: 10% - Only because Canada seems to enjoy retiring "their" hurricanes.
 * Laura: 0% - Just a fishie.
 * Marco: 0% - Not memorable beyond the confines of weather-wonks and trivia buffs.
 * Nana: 0% - Another total dud.
 * Omar: ?? - No direct deaths. Probably some damage involved but until figures are out I can't really give this one a particular number.

I'm new but heres mine perdiction so far: I excluded cristobal on the list because it hardly did anything Looks like this season already has another hurricane to my perdictions this season will be big. J.T 2:54, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
 * Arthur: 0% - A little tiny storm that hit mexico and was brought to life by a pacific hurricane not happenin
 * Bertha: 1% - sure the long lived july storm but did nothing but died in iceland
 * Dolly: 42% Even though its an estimate its possible come on people
 * Edouard: 5% Face it this storm should have been retired back in 96 and I was 2 years old
 * Fay: 48% - If this name gets retired im runnin up the hills like allison
 * Gustav: 100% - Since we havent had an official cat 4 in a while this will be it for Gustav, estimate 20.0 billions
 * Hanna: 95% - 535 deaths If noel got retired last year this is the next name and if it isn't WMO is on crack
 * Ike: 100% - This thing just raped the shit out of Texas i mean OMG                                                   *Josephine: 0% - Turned around to myself turns outs shes a dud                                                                                                                     *Kyle: 16% - I don't know we all remember juan right                                                              *Laura: 1% - Yeah yeah the wmo will be stupid jackasses if they retire this name                                  *Marco: 0% - well we might as well make fun of its short size right                                                     *Nana: 0% - wow just wow                                                                                                *Omar: 25% - I'm not placing any bets but it prop was a cat 4 right but regardless                              *Paloma: 35 - CHEERS this season broke the ultimate 2005 season for major canes each month but cuba screw again


 * Arthur - 0%
 * Bertha - 0%
 * Cristobal - 1%
 * Dolly - 60% Historically would have been retired. Wait for damage estimates.
 * Edouard - 10% Unlikely.
 * Fay - 20% Fair amount of Caribbean flooding, but not much.
 * Gustav - 100% Really obvious.
 * Hanna - 85% Over 500 dead in Haiti. No one wants another Gordon, and Noel was retired last year for a lot less. Probably gone.
 * Ike - Can't say for certain right now, but the forecasts look nasty. If it follows the forecasts, 90+%
 * Josephine - 0%

---

Let's be realistic here.

Bob rulz
 * Arthur - 0%
 * Bertha - 0%
 * Cristobal - 0%
 * Dolly - 20%
 * Edouard - 0%
 * Fay - 30%
 * Gustav - 85%
 * Hanna - 70% (Haiti doesn't have a good track record for retirement, but I think the WMO has gotten smarter)
 * Ike - 100% (deaths in Haiti, damage to Cuba, damage to the U.S.; this one's a certainty)
 * Josephine - 0%
 * Kyle - 0%
 * Laura - 0%
 * Marco - 0% (storms aren't retired for being record-breaking)


 * I note that Ike managed to kill 47 or 48 in Haiti despite never getting very near...what's the total for hurricane dead in Haiti so far this year?It seems something in the geography or infrastructure there puts Haitians at particular risk.Do their nominations for retirement usually get honored?--L.E./12.144.5.2 19:25, 8 September 2008 (UTC)


 * The last total I saw put the dead at over 1,000 from a month of storms but that may be an overestimate. I'm guessing it could still easily be at least 600. I'm not sure if Haiti even requests storms for retirement, but look up Gordon in 1994. Killed over 1,100 in Haiti yet wasn't retired. A travesty in my opinion. Bob rulz 01:03, 11 September 2008 (UTC)

My Predictions:


 * Arthur - 0%
 * Bertha - 0%
 * Cristobal - 0%
 * Dolly - 40%: If the 1,200,000,000 damage prediction is correct, I could see Dolly being retired.
 * Edouard - 0%
 * Fay - 25%: Decent amount of flooding in Florida; made landfall in Florida 4 times. We'll see.
 * Gustav - 100%: I cannot see any reason why Gustav would not be retired.
 * Hanna - 90%: I know, I know, Gordon wasn't retired, but with all the public backlash the WMO experienced from that, I can't see them making that mistake again.
 * Ike - 100%: Heavily damaged nearly all of Northeastern Texas, especially Galveston. Obvious candidate for retirement.
 * Josephine - 0%
 * Kyle - 0%: I live in Yarmouth where Kyle made landfall, and nothing happened.
 * Laura - 0%
 * Marco - 0%: Seeing as it's effects were like a particularly violent thunderstorm, I can't see any retirement.
 * Nana - 0%
 * Omar - 75% - May not have done tons of damage, but it did hit several French islands, and France is very liberal with dolling out retirements (see Klaus). France was the country that requested Noel last year too, and it hit the Windwards as a wave.

There you go. undefinedundefined 19:39, 13 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Arthur - No.
 * Bertha - Bermuda has gone through much, much, much worse.
 * Cristobal - No.
 * Dolly - A very slight maybe - while damages are considerable, one billion is no longer as much as it used to be.
 * Edouard - No.
 * Fay - Wasn't a great storm, but there's not much there to support retirement.
 * Gustav - Yes. Definitely yes. The US is definitely going to submit a 15 billion dollar name for retirement, and the WMO will definitely retire it.
 * Hanna - Probable, but Haiti doesn't much like (or whatever) to recommend storms for retirement, else there would be plenty more off-limits names in the Atlantic. If it was anywhere else, it would most likely be a lock.
 * Ike - The damage estimates are really, really high, and the damage pictures are really, really nasty. (That's a yes, in case you were wondering.)
 * Josephine - No.
 * Kyle - The Canadians don't get much up there, but then again, this wasn't bad even by their standards.
 * Laura - Considering it didn't actually do anything, no.
 * Marco - It's the smallest cyclone ever - as would be expected, it won't be retired.
 * Nana - Barely tropical, not even close to damaging.
 * Omar - This storm is technically officially a category 4 (wasn't even a "may" about it), but Wikipedia won't actually update it until that intensity is actually listed on an advisory, so you'll have to wait for the TCR to get that information updated. Fortunately, Omar mostly missed land, so it didn't do that much damage.
 * Paloma - Cuba damage wasn't awful, though it was very significant. I think Cuba may just decide to throw Paloma in the mix because of the added damages it caused. However, whether or not it will actually be retired probably depends on whether or not the damages on Little Cayman and Cayman Brac are as horrifying as they might be. I would say that Paloma is a complete toss-up - as more information comes in, we'll know better what the chances of retirement are. Squarethecircle 14:58, 13 November 2008 (UTC)

Squarethecircle 20:51, 23 September 2008 (UTC)

For the record (no pun intended), there have never been three consecutive retirees (nor three consecutive Hall of Famers if you like my system better) in the history of ever. Gustav, Hanna and Ike have a really good chance of doing it this year...and for all intents and purposes it should happen. -- SkyFury 05:06, 1 October 2008 (UTC)


 * I suppose Paloma's chances will be determined by the number of deaths in Cuba?--L.E./12.144.5.2 22:16, 8 November 2008 (UTC)
 * A number which fortunately appears to be low. -- SkyFury 05:27, 11 November 2008 (UTC)

Cleaning up the clutter
I've just archived the August discussion (excluding active storms) and Fay to their own archive pages; apologies if I wasn't supposed to do that. The page was just getting way too cluttered for me. Probably want to give Gustav its archive page soon, too. Thoughts?--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 20:10, 2 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Agreed. I just archived some old July discussion last week. I would keep Gustav up for at least another week as aftermath reports come in. HPC is still issuing advisories on inland flood threats from the remnants of Gustav. -- SkyFury 16:50, 3 September 2008 (UTC)


 * How about partially archiving and leaving the last two or three parts of it? Do we really still need the sub-section about Gustav-as-an-invest? --Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 18:01, 3 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Well just for the sake of keeping everything together and we don't have to keep it up much longer. I'd say by the time Ike is approaching landfall on the Gulf Coast (and the associated storm surge of posts come in) we should move Gus to a new home. -- SkyFury 06:10, 7 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Isn't it Hanna's turn now?--L.E./12.144.5.2 19:41, 11 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Yup. Think the remnants passed us here in the UK the other night. - Salak 11:34, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
 * Archived Ike too, given that it went away a good while ago. --Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 00:02, 24 September 2008 (UTC)

Archived the first few weeks of September; keeping week 4 (and Laura) open for now in case something develops out of those AoIs.--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 16:51, 1 October 2008 (UTC)


 * I think it's now the rest of September's turn. Storm&#39;s Eye 21:24, 4 October 2008 (UTC)


 * Hold Laura for another day or two... its remnants are passing over us here in the UK at the moment. - Salak 01:50, 6 October 2008 (UTC)


 * It's been another day or five, so as far as Laura goes, Off with 'r head!--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 16:19, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


 * I archived October posts and Omar, since it's already November, so if there's someone think that I shouldn't, apologies for that. :) Storm&#39;s Eye 02:13, 2 November 2008 (UTC)

What are the Storm Floaters?
I see that there are currently 3 GOES satellites active and explains "The GOES satellite has one visible-light imaging system that is kept in reserve for tropical storm situations. That camera is kept zoomed and focused on the current tropical system of interest" So how are so many floaters listed on  and ? 84.160.225.173 14:23, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
 * I assume the camera can refocus to a given coordinate within just a few minutes or even seconds. It's not that each image is taken exactly simultaneously, just within the same 15 minute period. Those images can be put through a myriad of spectrums which you see in the variety of IRs (which have been fantastically expanded). I don't know this for certain, it's just what I assume is going on. -- SkyFury 17:05, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

The Saffir-Simpson Scale
Seems to me the question has to be raised, but in the wake of Ike and the number of "Let's not run, it's only category 2"...should the scale be revised? It's useful enough, but when it becomes a pretext to ignore potentially devastating storms that happens to have somewhat weaker wind field, it's dangerous. Ike has made the point, for those who still missed it, that category and destructive potential were two, very, very different things (Katrina, for that matter - C-3 at landfall, after all)--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 03:09, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
 * Problem is, what additional objective and measurable data do you want to add into the criteria? 4.154.0.95 04:35, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
 * I agree, the SSHS is only useful for estimating possible wind damage, not surge or rain flooding damage. It would be useful if it said "surge of a cat. 5", etc. One should look at more than the wind and be more educated before deciding whether to evacuate. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 17:21, 17 September 2008 (UTC)

The SSHS is fairly analogous to the Richter Scale when talking about earthquakes. The Richter Scale is good for measuring raw seismic energy, just as the SSHS is good for measuring the raw intensity of a hurricane. While it and related scientific scales are still used within the scientific community to discuss the raw power of an earthquake, it's use by public agencies has diminished. The USGS favors the Modified Mercalli scale, which is a somewhat more subjective scale that is intended to measure the effect of an earthquake, not just its power. A similar scale for measuring the effect of a hurricane would be highly useful for governmental agencies, especially in issuing warnings to the public, as such a scale would be a better indicator of how damaging a storm will be, not just how intense.

The problem the IP (4.154.0.95) brings up before is a valid one, but one that can be addressed. As has been pointed out, intensity and wind speed are only one facet of a hurricane's destructive potential. Other factors, such as inland flooding from rain and, more particularly, storm surge are important - in fact, storm surge is usually the most dangerous element of a tropical cyclone. It should not be too hard to develop a relatively good system of forecasting a storm's damage potential based on key factors such as intensity, size, forward speed and the like.

A major weakness is the subjective nature in talking about "potential damage", but subjectivity need not be a major issue. The MM scale in earthquakes is measured in subjective terms, such as how hard it is to stand, how much things wobble, what sorts of structures are damaged. These are the things that truly interest the general public, rather than objective measures such as wind speed and pressure. Something like the following could be made up as a subjective scale for tropical cyclones:

Okay, so that was longer than I thought it would be :) Anyway, that's just an off the cuff example - but really I see no reason that a "subjective" scale cannot be developed that measures the predicted damage a storm will do, not just it's intensity.  Might get people to take storms more seriously. Albireo 20:52, 17 September 2008 (UTC)


 * Just so you know, '04s Matthew and '05s Gert had exactly the same wind speed at peak intensity (40 knots) and there was little appreciable difference in their effects. The root of the problem here is that every storm is different. The damage never depends solely on wind speed. The wind speed, pressure gradient (the pressure difference between the low of the storm and the pressure of the surrounding environment), the size of the storm (as was the case with Ike), and the amount of diffluence in the atmosphere to fuel the rainstorms. Rain is an incredibly powerful killer. Water kills more people than any other entitiy (apart from time). It is very difficult to predict how much rain a storm will drop, because that depends on a lot of different things. The damage also hangs a lot on the location of landfall and the terrain. Foreward speed, too. So there really isn't a way you can categorize these systems until after they happen (like tornadoes). Nothing is cut and dry and no matter what scale you set up, there will still be holes where people think they're safe and they're not. That's why basically all storms making landfall need to be watched very carefully. -- SkyFury 04:02, 18 September 2008 (UTC)


 * I do know, that's why I put them both up there in spite of having different effects :) I think that was the whole point, was to demonstrate that a storm's destructive potential has to do with a lot more than windspeed.  While it is true there is no way to accurately forecast how much damage a storm can do, I believe there is a lot of benefit to the notion of placing anticipated damages on a numeric scale.  How many folks refused to leave the Galveston area because Ike was "just a cat 2" storm?  Let's face it: people's focus immediately zeros in on things like storm categories, and they tend not to notice the dire warnings later on in the forecast.  Most people don't have the attention span to read a full forecast, so some kind of attention-grabbing system of saying "Forget the windspeed, this one is going to kick your ass" would do a lot of good in getting people to pack up and get the hell out. Albireo 15:42, 18 September 2008 (UTC)


 * I get the concepet, trying to create a scale not based solely on wind speed, I'm just saying that's very difficult. Yes there are ways we can generally judge the destructive potential of one storm as opposed to another of the same Saffir-Simpson category but such a scale is very subjective and in meteorology, you do best you can to stay objective. The closest we could come to producing an objective scale like that is taking the wind speed, pressure gradient, wind radii, diffluence and general region of estimated landfall together to create a kind of "Combined Effects Severity Scale" for tropical cyclones, Classes I-V or I-VII or something and that's a lot of work getting all that data just to produce a classification for the storm. If there's a way to make something like that practical, I'm all for it, but I just don't think it really makes much sense right now. On top of that, what are we accomplishing? Confusing the public? The problem of people underestimating the power of these storms will never go away, IMO. Katrina was a Category 5 hurricane with 175 mph sustained winds barrelling for New Orleans and still thousands were in no hurry to leave. "We made it through all the storms in the past, why not again? The Gov't will protect us and give us what we need." Despite seeing recent disasters like Andrew, Charley and Ivan on the news, it's still hard for people to comprehend such a destructive force. They just don't want to believe the storm will be that bad. It's not a problem so much with the classification system as it is a problem with human psychology. -- SkyFury 05:47, 21 September 2008 (UTC)


 * I think this is sort of the wrong approach. It's not about the Total Energy (TE), it's about the Total Destructive Energy (TDE). There are three factors which cause almost all of the damage in a tropical cyclone: Storm surge, winds, and torrential rain floods, in order from most to least damaging. Most of the other effects of a storm are negligible. The factors involved are (excluding land structure so as to allow free comparison of oceanic storm intensity) forward speed (all three), winds (surge and winds), and size (surge and rain floods). Now, there is a double weighting process: Weight the causal three for how much of the impacting three each accounts for, then weight the impacting three for how much damage they cause. Since these are also the three factors most often measured in the historical database, past storms can easily be assigned a rating. However, you then need a TLDE (Total Landfall Destructive Energy) component - different weightings are necessary depending on the coastal geography. Furthermore, a more... sort of advanced kind of description should be created for the categories. What I mean by this, is that, instead of letting the people watch videos of what happened before, or hear descriptions, it would be a lot better to show virtual explanations - a house very similar to their own getting obliterated by a hurricane that could be coming their way is a lot more effective than a house that they know is different, in a storm they know wasn't the same as the one bearing down on them. Of course, not everyone has a computer, but almost everyone has a TV. Squarethecircle 17:14, 27 September 2008 (UTC)


 * First off, inland flooding killed more than half of those who lost their lives in tropical cyclones between 1970 and 1999. Storm surge was in about the 20% range. I wrote my senior paper on this very thing. The most lethal misconception about tropical cyclones is that effects inland won't be as bad as on the coast. And don't forget about tornadoes. Tornadoes are a very serious threat from a landfalling hurricane. Carla produced an F4 tornado that killed like 20 people and destroyed a small town. These things are very complicated and you can't narrow it down that far. It also needs to be emphasized that we can only give the destructive potential of a storm. You're also missing the point on the way people think. People don't automatically assume an event is going to be such a horrible catastrophe and entire towns will be left in ruins. People can't wrap their minds around that. They can't bring themselves to believe that something like that might be happening. On 9/11, for the longest time people thought it was just a tragic accident despite the fact that the sky was clear and the weather was perfect. They didn't just up and say it was the worst act of violence in modern times outside theatres of war. No matter what scale you throw out there, there are still going to be hundreds, even thousands who think the storm won't be that bad. You can show video, animation, describe all the horrors of the past and many will still think you're being melodramatic. Yes, you say a storm headed for Texas has 110 mph winds and then show what 110 mph winds would do to a normal house...that will indeed raise some eyebrows but that won't give people the whole story. Minimizing human loss of life comes down to swift response of local officials and public awareness of where they live and what kind of effects they'll be looking at. It should be common sense that if you have a hurricane with 175 mph sustained winds coming at you that leaving might be a good idea. Especially if all the roads to the beach go uphill. That's not a scale problem, that's an education problem. -- SkyFury 05:52, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
 * What about a storm's IKE (Integrated Kinetic Energy)? Ike had a really high IKE, and while in the Gulf I think it peaked higher or about as high as Katrina and Rita. As a cat. 2, Ike could have been more destructive than Katrina as a cat. 5. 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 23:27, 2 October 2008 (UTC)

Of course inland flooding kills does significant damage - but not in the US. Think about it - people in some parts of Cuba, Hispaniola, etc. can't really evacuate per se and can't get that kind of information. Thus, they "don't count" - since this bit unfortunately wouldn't be able to help them, their information will just bias the data in the wrong direction - and given the number of deaths in those regions, that bias is extraordinary. Removing that section of the numbers puts inland flooding a fair amount behind the others (though some storms, like Allison, cause so much flooding that the damage is significant - i.e., inland flooding is more of a variant in terms of damage caused than storm surge and flooding).

Local officials can't handle that kind of work. Many of the small towns where damage is often the worst (since big cities don't typically line the shores, except for the Miami area) don't have enough people to handle it - their budget isn't big enough. Asking them to deal with a natural disaster is like asking Luxembourg to prevent Massive Retaliation (exaggeration) - they will not be able to do anything. The bigger problem is, no one can do that kind of work. You're asking for some sort of miracle for every vulnerable port town in the United States. So - do you have a reasonable idea? Squarethecircle 03:30, 5 October 2008 (UTC)


 * First, I don't understand how you can belittle inland flooding. Allison left downtown Houston looking much like New Orleans after Katrina. $5.5 billion final figure. Allison killed more people in the US (55) than Hugo (35), Isabel (50), Charley (30) or Ivan (54). Hurricane Agnes, 1972 made landfall in Florida with 75 mph winds (barely a hurricane) and caused record breaking floods across the entire eastern half of the country that killed 122. It would be 33 years before the US saw more people die in a hurricane. Hurricane Floyd, killed about 80 in catastrophic floods in the mid-Atlantic region. Ditto with Isabel. Diane in 1955 killed over 100 people in horrific floods in the mid-Atlantic states. Also of note, the Okeechobee Hurricane of 1928 that killed over 4,000 Floridians wouldn't have been an eighth as bad had torrential rain not caused the dykes holding back Lake Okeechobee to burst. It doesn't happen all the time, but it has happened many, many times in the recent past. Storm surge is just as variant. Larger and long-track storms will likely have a larger storm surge than others. Location is also key. Note that Andrew's storm surge did almost nothing, venting all 17 feet of it onto uninhabited Elliott Key. Most of Andrew's damage was wind related (very unusual for a destructive hurricane, but it happened).
 * Second, I'm not asking local officials for the moon, just to do for their people like Galveston County and Texas officials did for Ike and personal awareness is even more important than that. I doubt many of those affected even attached any significance to the "Category 2" designation, they just knew it was a big hurricane coming at them. You're not going to get everybody in danger to leave, it's just not going to happen (nor will it ever IMO). We just have to find a way to convince as many people as we can that when a big storm is coming, staying would be tantamount to suicide. There are so many factors that come into play when you try to determine the destructive potential of one storm over another. That's why I think any scale that would give a better idea of a storm's destructive potential than SSHS would be too complex to be practical...at this point. -- SkyFury 23:29, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

Any Reason Why?
Since 2001 on wiki there are 2 - 3 Main Discussion articles on a hurricane season. I dont know who changed it or why but the articles that date 2000 and before are more neat and have each hurricane/Storm with its own article. List of storms in the 2001 Atlantic hurricane season, and 2001 Atlantic hurricane season are almsot the same and this has gone on to 2007. Knowledgekid87 10:42, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
 * If I remember correctly, 2005 is to blame for that. People realized that with very seasons of 15, 20, 30 depressions and storms, you rapidly got to the point where articles were clunky and had far too much material. Hence the separation. I could be wrong, though.--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 17:51, 29 September 2008 (UTC
 * Yeah I understand how 2005 could be in that format with so much to talk about but not the others. The 2006 Atlantic hurricane season article is in that format with just 10 storms. Oh well anyways hopefully a veteran editor will come along and clean it up. Based on the storms so far in my opinion there is no need for the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season to have a branch out "List of storms in the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season" type article. Knowledgekid87 16:04, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
 * For 2006, yeah, I can see, but for seasons of 15, 20 storms it's already unwieldy enough, and a summary of the season works better than a list of storms for the main article.--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 20:19, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
 * I agree, keep in mind though in most cases the storms themselves have their own articles so alot of info is just rewritten again. Knowledgekid87 23:28, 29 September 2008 (UTC)

Replacement names for possible retirement candidates
Well, it looks like we have quite a few possible retirement candidates for this hurricane season. Here is a list that I compiled of possible replacement names that I like, with my favorites highlighted in bold.

Female D names
 * DAISY
 * DANA
 * DAPHNE
 * DARLA
 * DAWN
 * DEANNA
 * DELIA
 * DELPHINA
 * DENISE
 * DESIREE
 * DINAH
 * DIONNE
 * DIXIE
 * DOMINIQUE
 * DORIS
 * DOROTHY
 * DOT

Female F names
 * FABIANNA
 * FEDORA
 * FELISHA
 * FERN
 * FIORENZA
 * FRANCESCA
 * FRANCINE

Male G names Female H names
 * GABE
 * GARFIELD
 * GARRETT
 * GARTH
 * GARY
 * GENE
 * GEOFF
 * GERALD
 * GERALDO
 * GERARD
 * GERMAN
 * GIANMARCO
 * GIOVANNI
 * GLENN
 * GODDARD
 * GRAHAM
 * GRIFFIN
 * HAILEY
 * HARRIET
 * HEIDI
 * HELENA
 * HELEN
 * HELGA
 * HOLLY

Male I names
 * IAN
 * IMMANUEL
 * INNOCENTE
 * IOAN
 * IRVING
 * IZZY

Does anyone have any names that they like to add to these lists? 69.92.37.140 22:28, 2 October 2008 (UTC)
 * Hilda is a BIG no no. Already used. Already retired. Igor is Ivan's replacement. George, if you ask me, is unusable due to Georges.

24.131.201.224 06:07, 3 October 2008 (UTC)
 * G names: Guy, Garcia, Geoffrey
 * I names: Iggy, Irving, Isaiah, Irv, Ingmar, Innes (likely not good due to Inez)
 * Well, Frederic was replaced by Fabian, which was soon replaced by Fred. Thus, it is not unheard of for the WMO to use a variant of a previously retired name.  Since Igor is already being used, my choice for Ike's replacement would then be Ian. 69.92.37.140 01:58, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
 * I'd agree, but I forgot one detail: Hilda's in use in the EPac on the current lists. When you consider it was retired in the Atlantic, plus the fact that the name's in use in a different basin also advised by the NHC, the chances of Atl reuse are, essentially, zero. 24.131.201.224 09:21, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
 * First off, I don't believe Fay will be retired. Dolly is possible, but it wouldn't surprise me if it's not retired either, if only for the reason that there were far more significant storms this season. Try and not get silly with this. Common names are best. Other D-names: Dawn, Dinah, Dominique and Dot. There are lots of good 'G' names; I added Gabe, Gerard, German and Glenn. Running out of I-names; I added Irving (mentioned above), Innocente and Ioan (male spelling). I also removed some of the crazier names and unusable names (ones in use in ATL or EPAC, such as Igor and Gil, or retired names) to save space. I'll go with Denise, Graham, Helen and Ian. But there are some other good names up there. Also, no retired name is retired permanently. The rule is that a name is not used for 30 years after its retirement. 2009 (when the name Fred is targeted for use) will see the 30th anniversary of Frederic's landfall. I was a little surprised that they used it this soon however as there are other male 'F' names that could've been used, such as Fritz, Franz and Fernando (which replaced Felix last year...I still refuse to acknowledge the French form because it's mindnumbingly stupid, and the French irritate me to no end). -- SkyFury 19:22, 6 October 2008 (UTC)
 * Dude, have you BEEN to France? They're actually very nice and considerate people. Squarethecircle 22:42, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

When will the NHC switch to a "continuous" naming system like the West Pacific? It's much more useful. Bob rulz 21:26, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
 * I don't believe they use names in the Atlantic that aren't either English, French, or Spanish. Some names appear to be retired indefinitely, according to Wikipedia. The only re-used retired names so far were decades ago and were partially mistakes. By the way Sky, Dorian is a unisex name. Also, you may not like the French, but...c'est la vie. Just a side note: Innocente would not be a good name for a hurricane because how would you retire an "innocent" name? I've also never heard of "Immanuel" except as "Emmanuel". 2007Astro&#39;sHurricane 01:07, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
 * So, is there any problem with Italian names? It would be interesting to have a few of them, which is why I chose Fiorenza and Giovanni. 69.92.37.140 02:11, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Astro, that's one of many reasons why I hated the choice of 'Dorian' over the slew of normal names that could've been chosen (Derek, Darren, Daryl...). Square, yes I have been to France (June, 2001) and it's a great place, I had a lot of fun. I don't have a problem with the people per se, I have a problem with their extremely stuck up government. It always has to be them; they have to go first. They have to have the organization that controls one thing or another. They have to have the last word on whatever they want. They're like the snotty third grader that pitches a fit everytime you don't involve them in something. Also, I don't know if you noticed, but there's a lot of underhanded gouging of tourists over there. For example, there are no free refills in French restaurants, but sometimes, when they see you're an American used to free refills, they'll take your glass, refill it an then charge you for it even though you didn't ask for a refill. We were a school group with French teachers, so it didn't happen to us but I've heard more than one story like that. -- SkyFury 17:36, 13 October 2008 (UTC)

Could Gustav became a Cat5
I was reading this one dudes question on wikipedia and I wanted to ask you guys could it have become a cat 5 and it was also weird that they were no cat 5 this season since there has been one every season since 2003. J.T 4:06, 27 October 2008 (UTC)
 * Not 2006, peak category that year was Category 3. Yes, Gustav could' be upgraded to a Category 5 or very close to Category 5 (by that I mean 155mph). 59.10.63.86 23:14, 2 November 2008 (UTC)
 * I don't think it's likely. The pressure was still pretty high (941 mb) and all indications are that it got no stronger than 135 kts, and the 130 kt figure is likely to stand. I think Ike may have surpassed it in terms of pressure, but Gustav will still likely be the season's strongest hurricane in terms of wind speed. -- SkyFury 19:45, 5 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Actully the running best track has downgraded it to 125 knots which means its still a 4 Jason Rees 18:02, 8 November 2008 (UTC)

Retirements at a glance, part 2
Well, since the previous section got quite large, I decided it is time to revisit the subject and start a new section, as the season is almost over.

Here are my latest guesses: Anyone have other guesses? 129.24.158.188 15:56, 7 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Arthur - 4% - not severely damaging.
 * Bertha - 3% - strong, but once again not severely damaging.
 * Cristobal - 2% - forgettable, barely damaging at all.
 * Dolly - 60% - Damage estimate still remains at $1.52 billion several months after its landfall.
 * Edouard - 5% - Damage total unknown, but once again, probably not severe.
 * Fay - 25% - Current damage estimate is $180 million, which is significant (especially for a tropical storm), but nothing extremely severe (far short of $1 billion mark).
 * Gustav - 95% - Very severely damaging, I would be very surprised if it is not retired.
 * Hanna - 85% - Very deadly, although Gordon (which affected the same area) of 1994 wasn't retired, yet again, Jeanne of 2004 was retired.
 * Ike - 100% - Third most destructive named hurricane in U.S. history, pretty obvious candidate.
 * Josephine - 1% - just gave Cape Verde a little breeze and nothing else.
 * Kyle - 5% - While not severely damaging, Canada got Juan of 2003 retired. However, Kyle was less damaging than Juan, so I don't think it is very likely Kyle will be retired.
 * Laura - 1% - Fishspinner while tropical.
 * Marco - 5% - Damage unknown, but probably not severe.
 * Nana - 0% - Total fishspinner.
 * Omar - 15% - Still waiting for damage total. Probably more damaging than Edouard and Marco, but we will have to see whether the damage is severe enough for retirement.  This is exactly what we have been doing with T.S. Erin last year.
 * Paloma (tentative) - 40% 55% - A fairly strong hurricane that caused $1.4 billion in damage in Cuba. 69.92.37.140 02:30, 13 November 2008 (UTC)


 * Mine:
 * Certain (99.99%): Gustav and Ike. Not retiring either of these would run against everything retirement stands for. US will nominate, and WMO will retire.
 * Probable (90%): Hanna. Only "mostly" because of the unwritten Haiti Rule.
 * Possible (40%): Dolly. Impressive, but lost in the shadows of the G-H-I (arguably FGHI) sequence. May slip through the crack between Gustav and Ike.
 * Possible (40%): Kyle. We Canucks rarely get the chance to nominate anything, so we may try our hand at it there.
 * Hopeful (25%): Fay. Weak, but retirement has more to do with name-defining storms (ie, storms that people would automatically think of when the name surfaced again) than with pure strength and damage alone, in theory, and I think Fay's antics have made Fay of 2008 far more defining of the name "Fay" than Dolly of 2008 of the name "Dolly". Also, I will be eternally grateful to the WMO if they do retire our little Joker.
 * Not happening (0.01%): Everyone else.


 * That's about all I can say so far--Guillaume Hébert-Jodoin 18:42, 7 November 2008 (UTC)