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Dangerous and very active hurricane season expected for 2021

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Dangerous and very active Atlantic hurricane season 2021 expected: Above-average probability for major hurricanes making landfall along the continental US coastline

After the record-breaking Atlantic hurricane season last year, it appears likely that 2021 is in for the sixth consecutive above-average year. First predictions have been released, and the message is straightforward: Yet another very active hurricane season is expected in 2021. With a quite concerning notice that also an above-average probability of hurricane landfalls along the US coastline and in the Caribbean is likely.

The upcoming 2021 Atlantic hurricane season is once again anticipating an active year. After such an active and devastating record number of named storms and destructive hurricanes, this year is expected to bring much above normal activity again.

One of the most recognized and trusted hurricane season early predictions is made by the Colorado State University (CSU) team of scientists, led by Dr. Phil Klotzbach. For 2021, the CSU team calls for 17 named tropical cyclone formations, including 8 hurricanes and also the striking 4 major hurricanes.

Note: an average hurricane season normally produces 14 named storms, 7 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes. The image below is the infrared satellite view of a Category 5 hurricane Iota in mid-November last year.

Thanks to the ongoing La Nina global weather pattern and well-above-average Atlantic sea temperatures, including the Caribbean and the Gulf temperatures, the upcoming hurricane season is expected to be rough. Although the tropical Pacific Ocean waters are gradually warming up now, weak La Nina is expected to continue until early summer this year, with ENSO conditions revert to neutral a month or two later.

Last year, there were so many named storms that they ran out of names to call them. They're saying that it could be a repeat of that this year.

2020 ATLANTIC HURRICANE SEASON WAS EXCEPTIONAL, COULD IT REPEAT THIS YEAR?


If we remember the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, it was setting record after record with so many storms forming. It was almost too hard to keep track of all the activity. The 2020 storms have used all the designated tropical cyclone names and dug deep into the Greek Alphabet storm names.

And to top those numbers, a record-breaking 11 storms made landfall in the United States, including 6 hurricanes. Those were Hanna, Isaias, Laura, Sally, Delta, and Zeta.

atlantic-hurricane-season-2021-forecast-last-year.jpg


Last year has reached an unpreceded 30 named storms, an absolute record-breaking number of storms in one season. The final storm was a Major hurricane Iota which has become the first and also the only Category 5 storm of the Atlantic hurricane season 2020.

atlantic-hurricane-season-2021-forecast-storm-names.png
 

We Never Know

No Slack
Dangerous and very active Atlantic hurricane season 2021 expected: Above-average probability for major hurricanes making landfall along the continental US coastline





Last year, there were so many named storms that they ran out of names to call them. They're saying that it could be a repeat of that this year.





atlantic-hurricane-season-2021-forecast-storm-names.png
A little more info for 2020
"In 2020 of the 30 named storms 11 of them made landfall in the contiguous United States, breaking the record of nine set in 1916."
 

Stevicus

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
A little more info for 2020
"In 2020 of the 30 named storms 11 of them made landfall in the contiguous United States, breaking the record of nine set in 1916."

It's kind of surreal in a way, as the Eastern states get pounded with hurricanes and rain, while the Western states are dry as a bone, facing drought and potential water shortages.
 

Brickjectivity

Turned to Stone. Now I stretch daily.
Staff member
Premium Member
It's kind of surreal in a way, as the Eastern states get pounded with hurricanes and rain, while the Western states are dry as a bone, facing drought and potential water shortages.
...and wild fires. Last year the West was dealing with fires while the East was dealing with storms.
 

Aštra’el

Aštara, Blade of Aštoreth
It is beautiful isn’t it. I have been through several hurricanes and I happen to enjoy it. I understand they can be devastating for some people, especially those living in flood prone areas, but I love the wind, and the rain, the thrill of it all, the cataclysm, the renewal, etc. It is awe inspiring experiencing what our weather is capable of. I feel a greater respect for the earth and appreciation of my life because of it.
 

rational experiences

Veteran Member
I wonder at the sciences studying changing environmental conditions when they are imposing studies to change environmental conditions.

The copying copying effect.

Illogical really.

A reaction is a hurricane or tornado. Heavenly owned by its purpose. What happens if natural cannot act naturally. It would increase the reaction until reactions cause another effect.

And I would wonder what would happen if multi reactions increased. I thought science said cause then effect changes.

Ownership said by humans that God O the planet owned the heavens. Which is not science. I know as a thinking human that status and claim owner was stated lawful by human imposition.

To reason why God was given status and purpose involving human law.

The meaning of God and law to me makes common sense reasoning when all each of us owns is one self human life.

So I wonder why human law allowed our heavens to become changed.
 

pearl

Well-Known Member
We live in New England and fortunately not many hurricanes make it this far and those that do are broken up by the hills and mountains. Haven't had a tornado since 1953. Drought is rare.
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Boring names. Couldn't they think of anything more exotic?

Henri and Claudette sound like cheese-eating surrender hurricanes.

Probably only a threat to mollycoddled Generation Z snowflake types.

I'd also be ****ing furious if I got killed or even maimed by Hurricane Julian. If you got done by a mincing fop of a hurricane like that you'd never be able to show you face in public again.
 

Valjean

Veteran Member
Premium Member
We live in New England and fortunately not many hurricanes make it this far and those that do are broken up by the hills and mountains. Haven't had a tornado since 1953. Drought is rare.
Perhaps they're put off by your long, frigid Winters.
:rolleyes:
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Henri and Claudette sound like cheese-eating surrender hurricanes.

Probably only a threat to mollycoddled Generation Z snowflake types.

I'd also be ****ing furious if I got killed or even maimed by Hurricane Julian. If you got done by a mincing fop of a hurricane like that you'd never be able to show you face in public again.
They need to name one like, Aunt Bee or the Stay Puff Marshmallow Msn.
 
They need to name one like, Aunt Bee or the Stay Puff Marshmallow Msn.

It's an improvement

Hurricane Mike Tyson or Hurricane Vlad the Impaler would surely have a better chance of getting people to take them seriously and evacuate their cities than Hurricane Julian would.

Imagine trying to make an insurance claim.

What exactly happened to your house, sir?
"Hurricane Julian blew the roof off"
Of course it did sir, I'm just going to type that up on my invisible typewriter...


 
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