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History repeats itself...

The Tradition

HR King
Apr 23, 2002
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Hours after Hurricane Nicole began its assault on Florida’s eastern edge, meteorologists marveled at the parallels between storms in Florida’s 2022 and 2004 hurricane seasons. In particular, the paths of two pairs of hurricanes — Nicole and Jeanne, and Ian and Charley — showed undeniable and eerie similarities.

Separated by 18 years, both pairs hit in almost the same place and followed nearly identical paths. In both instances, the storms’ landfalls were 43 days apart.


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On social media, meteorologists described the coincidences as “wild,” “amazing” and “crazy.”


Nicole and Jeanne​

At 3 a.m. Thursday, Nicole made landfall just south of Vero Beach, Fla., as a Category 1 hurricane.

Eighteen years earlier and less than 15 miles away, Hurricane Jeanne made landfall at the southern end of Hutchinson Island the night of Sept. 25.

Jeanne lashed the island as a Category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 120 mph before weakening to a tropical storm over central Florida, according to the National Weather Service. Along a boomerang-shaped path, Jeanne then turned sharply toward central Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia.

Nicole was likewise downgraded to a tropical storm over Florida’s interior and is also projected to streak north into central Georgia, following a path just a hint to the west of Jeanne’s.


Ian and Charley​

The tracks of Ian and Charley are also nearly identical.

Forty-three days ago, Ian made landfall near Cayo Costa, devastating southwestern Florida as a high-end Category 4 storm. It was Florida’s first hurricane of this season.

Charley, Florida’s first hurricane of the 2004 hurricane season, also made landfall near Cayo Costa as a high-end Category 4 storm.

In another uncanny similarity, the National Hurricane Center had initially predicted both Charley and Ian would make landfall near Tampa Bay, but both storms made a late shift and struck closer to Fort Myers.

Then, both Ian and Charley traveled northeast across the Sunshine State.

Is there an explanation for the coincidences?​

It appears that the storm similarities were first noticed by Matt Devitt, chief meteorologist for Tampa affiliate WINK, who posted illustrations on Twitter early Thursday.

Meteorologists don’t have an explanation for the deja vu moment.

“It’s certainly a remarkable coincidence,” Brian McNoldy, a hurricane researcher at the University of Miami, told The Washington Post.

Phil Klotzbach, a hurricane researcher at Colorado State University, agreed. “It is an interesting curiosity, but I think that’s all that there is to this,” he wrote in an email.

While 2022 and 2004 shared the strangely similar storm pairings, the two hurricane seasons differed in important ways.

Florida’s 2004 hurricane season was marked by extremely high activity featuring four major storms, rated Category 3 or higher. That year, Charley started off Florida’s season in mid-August. This year, Ian kicked off Florida’s hurricane season in late September.

There were also differences in the storms’ intensities.

“Ian was a much larger storm than Charley and consequently caused more damage, while Jeanne was a much stronger hurricane than Nicole (and consequently caused more damage),” Klotzbach wrote.

Nicole is the 122nd hurricane to hit the state since 1851 — making Florida the most hurricane-ravaged state in the country.

Florida has the second-longest coastline — 1,350 miles — among states, behind Alaska. The state juts into warm, tropical waters, directly into the paths of hurricanes trekking across the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, which makes it a prime landing spot during Atlantic hurricane season.

Although the 2004 hurricane season started early and was extremely busy, 2022’s season started late and has had near-average activity.

 
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This thread makes me want to watch swinging hurricane porn.
 
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I just want to know who I can send all my money to in order to help stop these hurricanes from happening 5000 years from now. Should I write a check or just send cash? I can Venmo the money too. I just want to help stop all this, and I just want to help all those politicians and celebrities get from city to city in those fancy jets so they can help lecture us peons about climate change and such.

Meanwhile, are there more pics of Nicole and Jeanne criss crossing and scissoring?
 
So, don't live in Florida? :)
Florida is why insurance premiums are outrageous and why insurance companies go bankrupt.

Everyone in this country pays more for their insurance because of claims there.

It's why lumber and building material prices continue to skyrocket.

It's like a shithole country that Turd described.
 
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Florida is why insurance premiums are outrageous and why insurance companies go bankrupt.

Everyone in this country pays more for their insurance because of claims there.

It's why lumber and building material prices continue to skyrocket.

It's like a shithole country that Turd described.

California doesn't have any natural disaster issues? Seems like the entire state has been one big wildfire lately.
 
California doesn't have any natural disaster issues? Seems like the entire state has been one big wildfire lately.
California supports itself with the tech industry and agriculture production.

Florida gives Merica a few crates of oranges and a couple gallons of juice.

Florida is an unending money pit in this country and most everyone realizes that. Probably the biggest drain on the Social Security system, as well.

Geographically, Cali is 165,000 sq mi, while Florida is around 65,000. I don't know if you were home schooled or any school, but Cali is well over twice the size.

Bring your "A" game next time.
 
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