La Nina Usually Means more Atlantic Hurricanes - Why?
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- čas přidán 14. 04. 2024
- #hurricanes #weather #elnino #storms
My video today goes into detail about the coming La Nina and how it typically results in more Atlantic hurricanes.
Link to The Hail Project Podcast - episode 1:
• The Hail Project Podca...
Climate.gov site mentioned in today's update:
www.climate.gov/news-features...
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Don’t be scared. Be prepared. Thanks, Mark, for helping people be as ready as possible for a busy season.
I'm sorry I hope you feel better.
Thank you for the hurricane and climate knowledge Mark always appreciated 👍 Hopefully you get better soon
Feel better Mark!
Oh here we go , countdown to the hurricane season
So happy to hear from you Mark. Well, that was an awesome coverage of the scenario. Even if you sounded like Bullwinkle at the beginning 😄 Thank you so very much for doing all this work. My wife and I , and our friends and family really appreciate it. Greetings from Puerto Rico, where Luis is from. Smart guy like you. Get well soon. Thanks again.
Get well soon Mr. Sudduth!!❤❤
Thanks! Sooooo annoying! At least I was 100% for the conferences.
some areas of the carribean already approaching 29C is kinda crazy for april
I love how you talk of the hail in the wild. Keep wondering where I can see non-wild hail.
Thx Mark
Get well soon sir
Here they come! Better get ready! Got my battery operated lights bulbs fans and TV's, I'm set
I have another cold, too. One after another this year. I hope the hurricanes aren't as regularly occurring as my colds.
As a insurance adjuster looking for work it’s hard not to cheer🎉
GWO stands for Global Weather Oscillations.
At the moment would we be in Enso Neutral?
215MPH hurricane Patricia in 2015 when the Pacific took over and the north Atlantic looks to take over all the energy from the world this time. Wouldn't be as surprising for a hurricane to reach or exceed 200MPH in the Atlantic this year or any year for that matter with climate change but can't say for sure for the first ever 200MPH hurricane in the Atlantic this year as I think of that as a long shot. Though, it's only a matter of time before that happens and no one on land in the Atlantic basin will be ready if such a powerful storm brought land impacts.
There's the saying, "it only takes one"
And more frequent Thyphoon at Western Pasific, South East Asia and East Asia😢.
What about Honga-Tonga in 2022? Probably had nothing to do with it, but I thought that's what it was according to the national forecasters from Accuweather. Most likely had to do with the Atlantic itself but would be of great interest to know for sure why 2022 was more inactive despite the forecasts.
2007 was also did not produce anything after dean and felix but i think the pattern we are closer toward is 2010 and 2020 according to gavsweathervids
Do rising La Nina thresholds perhaps mean a slight change in the MDR areas?
Probably not since the two are unrelated.
Also means we will cook in the sun
think we will be in full la nina before june?
Not that soon but by August, yes.
@@hurricanetrack id imagine its crashing fast enough to be in la nina by june. im guessing the whole Western part must be in la nina too before it fully kicks in
GWO is an awful company that adjusts their numbers after the season is over to make it look like they got it right, it's disgusting that they're even included on the same list as TSR and CSU