Hypothetical Hurricanes Wiki

Welcome to the wiki! Learn more about it here.

Disclaimer: The content on this wiki is fictional and NOT a resource for real tropical cyclones. NONE of this wiki's content should be taken as a real indication of inclement weather.

READ MORE

Hypothetical Hurricanes Wiki
Advertisement
Hypothetical Hurricanes Wiki


Storms
5 Arthur
4 Bertha
TS Cristobal
6 Dolly
3 Edouard
2 Fay
1 Gonzalo
SS Hanna
SD Nine
TD Ten
7 Isaias
8 Josephine
9 Kyle
10 Laura
SHC Marco
HC Nana
MC Omar
C2M Paulette
C3M Quinn
SUS Rene
IS Sally
HMB Thomas
SC Teddy-Umi
FC Vicky
LC Wilfred
IA 26
SIA 27
ES Xavier
ED 29
TS Yera
1 Zeke
TS Alpha
2 Beta
4 Gamma
SS Delta
5 Epsilon
TD 37
MB Zeta
TS Eta
SS Theta


The 2014 Atlantic hurricane season was extremely active because of a Very Strong La Nina that only happens roughly once every 16 million years.

Storms[]

Hurricane Arthur[]

Category 5 hurricane (SSHWS)
Hurricane Ella 1978
DurationJanuary 1 – February 2
Peak intensity190 mph (305 km/h) (1-min) 869 mbar (hPa)

Arthur formed from a powerful Extratropical storm that had near hurricane force winds near its eastern side of its circulation center north of the Bahamas that formed on December 25, 2013 it then absorbed the Category 2 Hurricane remnants of Megacane Uni and the merger started the 7 day process of it detaching from its frontal systems it then finished detaching from its frontal boundaries on December 31, 2013 at 11:59 PM EST and it skipped Subtropical Storm status and went directly into Tropical Storm status with 70 mph sustained winds on January 1, 2014 12:16 AM EST and a developing eye feature it then quickly intensifed into a 190 mph Category 5 Hurricane 6 hours later at 6 AM EST due to 100° SSTs it became the earliest Category 5 Hurricane in recorded history it then turned toward Bermuda on January 4 and it made landfall there as a 185 mph Cat 5 Hurricane it then turned southeast and went toward the Leeward islands and it made landfall there as a restrengthened 190 mph Category 5 Hurricane on January 11 it then headed for Africa and absorbed several tropical waves coming off Africa it then made landfall on the West Coast of Africa on January 17 as a 180 mph Cat 5 Hurricane it then turned west when it was only 69 miles inland and it reemerged as a 170 mph Cat 5 it then headed for the Flordia it then made landfall there on January 26 as a 190 mph Cat 5 it then made its final landfall on the border of Texas and Mexico as a 190 mph Cat 5 on January 31 it retained cat 5 status for 6 hours after landfall it then quickly dropped below Major Hurricane Status 6 hours later it then dropped below Hurricane Status 1 and a half hours later it then dropped below Storm Status 4 hours later it then dropped below depression status and became a remnant low with only few remaining showers to the north and east of the center of circulation it then remained like that for a few days and then it dissipated completely on February 2 over Kansas City, Kansas.

Hurricane Bertha[]

Category 4 hurricane (SSHWS)
Hurricane Igor at 1640z on September 13, 2010
DurationFebruary 3 – February 27
Peak intensity155 mph (250 km/h) (1-min) 922 mbar (hPa)

Bertha formed from a unusually early tropical wave on February 3 though the wave came off of Africa on February 1 it then developed directly into a 65 mph Tropical Storm it then rapidly intensified into a strong Category 4 Hurricane with 155 mph sustained winds 6 hours later because of 88 °F SSTs it then stayed at that intensity for about 3 weeks until it neared landfall on the already soaked Florida it then made landfall there on February 23 as a 150 mph Cat 4 Hurricane it then reemerged as a weak 130 mph Cat 4 Hurricane it then Restrengthened into a 155 mph Cat 4 Hurricane and it made landfall in Mississippi as a strong 155 mph cat 4 hurricane on February 24 it then lost major hurricane status 2 hours after landfall, hurricane status another 3 hours after landfall, storm status 6 hours later, it then dropped below depression status 5 hours later it then became a non-convective remnant low and it stayed like that until dissipated completely over Pennsylvania on February 27.

Tropical Storm Cristobal[]

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
Ophelia3
DurationFebruary 11 – February 20
Peak intensity70 mph (110 km/h) (1-min) 984 mbar (hPa)

like Bertha it also was formed from a tropical wave that came off of Africa on February 4 it then became a Tropical Depression with 35 mph winds and it was located 100 miles west of the Leeward islands it then strengthened into a 55 mph Tropical Storm an hour later while only 30 miles west of the Leeward islands, it strengthened some more into a 65 mph Tropical Storm and made landfall on the Leeward islands a 65 mph storm with a eye like feature showing up on radar it then headed for the Yucatan Penisula and it made landfall there on February 15 as a 70 mph Tropical Storm and once again an eye like feature was still trying to get its act together on radar it then reemerged into the Bay of Campeche as 45 mph Tropical Storm on February 16 it then rapidly became a 70 mph tropical storm again 4 hours later it then made landfall in Houston,Texas on February 18 as a 70 mph tropical storm and again it had a eye-like feature on radar and it was kind of visible on visible imagery for the first time but it ran out of time and it quickly weakened into a 40 mph tropical storm 4 hours after landfall it then became a tropical depression 30 minutes later it then became a remnant low with only a few showers and thunderstorms remaining in its circulation 6 hours later it then dissipated on February 20 over Oklahoma.

Hurricane Dolly[]

Category 6 hurricane
Wilma
DurationFebruary 20 – March 10
Peak intensity225 mph (360 km/h) (1-min) 858 mbar (hPa)

Hurricane Dolly formed from 2 very well defined tropical waves merging on February 20 just 200 miles off the coast of Africa the combined wave quickly developed into a tropical storm with 50 mph sustained winds, it quickly became a Hurricane on the same day, it then quickly became a Major Hurricane 2 hours later. It quickly became a Category 6 Hurricane with 225 mph winds and a central pressure of 858 mbar it then traveled due west across the atlantic until it got close to the US it then turned sharply to the Northwest and it hit South Carolina as a 220 mph Category 6 Hurricane on March 8 it then stayed as a Category 6 Hurricane for 4 hours after landfall but it lost major hurricane status 4 hours after that, it then lost hurricane status 3 hours after that, it lost storm status 3 hours later, it finally weakened below depression status 5 hours later and it became a remnant low with only a few showers and scattered thunderstorms remaining to the north and east of its circulation center it then dissipated completely over Kentucky on March 10.

Hurricane Edouard[]

Category 3 hurricane (SSHWS)
Isidore AMO2002265 lrg
DurationFebruary 27 – March 10
Peak intensity125 mph (205 km/h) (1-min) 942 mbar (hPa)

Edouard like Bertha formed from a tropical wave that came off of Africa on February 24 it developed into a 65 mph Tropical storm on February 27 500 miles east of the leeward islands it strengthened into 95 mph Category 1 Hurricane 2 hours later while only 90 miles east of the leeward islands it then quickly became a 110 mph Category 2 Hurricane 30 minutes later, it then made landfall at that same intensity in the Leeward Islands it then quickly became a 125 mph Category 3 Hurricane on March while only 125 miles east of the Yucatan Peninsula it then made landfall there as a slightly weaker 120 mph Cat 3 Hurricane it then reemerged as a weak 100 mph Cat 2 Hurricane after staying over the Yucatan for 34 hours. it then quickly restrengthened into a 125 mph Cat 3 Hurricane because of 87 °F SSTs and no wind shear it then made landfall in Laredo,Texas as 125 mph Cat 3 Hurricane On March 7,  it then weakened below major hurricane status 2 hours later it weakened below hurricane status 6 hours after that, it lost storm status another 7 hours after that and it finally weakened below depression status 9 hours after that when it was over southern Oklahoma it became a remnant area of low pressure with only a few scattered showers and thunderstorms to the north and east of the center it stayed like that for 2 days before dissipating completely on March 10 over Illinois.

Hurricane Fay[]

Category 2 hurricane (SSHWS)
Hurricane humberto 2001
DurationFebruary 27 as of 3 PM EST – March 22 (Dissipated as Tropical Cyclone on March 12th)
Peak intensity110 mph (175 km/h) (1-min) 964 mbar (hPa)

Fay formed from the merger of 3 very well defined tropical waves merging on February 27 at 12 PM EST, the merged tropical wave became Tropical Storm Fay with maximum sustained winds of 55 mph it already had a developing eye-like feature and it was situated 700 miles from the Leeward Islands it then became a 85 mph Cat 1 Hurricane 2 hours later while only 400 miles to the east of the Leeward Islands it then strengthened into a 105 mph Cat 2 Hurricane another 2 hours later while only 25 miles east of the Leeward Islands it then made landfall in the Leeward Islands it unexpectedly weakened into a 90 mph Cat 1 Hurricane despite favorable conditions but it quickly strengthened into a 110 mph Cat 2 Hurricane 5 hours later while 200 miles south of Jamaica it very nearly became a major hurricane but before it could it made landfall in Jamaica on March 5 as a 110 mph Cat 2 Hurricane the eye of hurricane stayed over Jamaica for 25 hours before reemerging into the Atlantic Ocean as a 75 mph minimal hurricane it quickly restrengthened into a 110 mph Cat 2 hurricane again due to 87 °F SSTs and no wind shear but the enviroment was never good enough for it to become a major hurricane so it stayed at that intensity and it hit Bermuda on March 10 as a 110 mph Cat 2 Hurricane it then curved toward Newfoundland on March 12 and it made its final landfall there as a 105 mph Cat 2 Hurricane but after emerging into the Gulf of St. Lawrence as a slightly strengthened 110 mph cat 2 Hurricane it merged with a fast approcahing cold front and became Category 2 Hurricane Equivalent Extratropical Storm 2 hours later but deepened to below 920 mbar it became Category 5 Hurricane Equivalent it made landfall in Greenland on March 15 as 916 mbar Category 5 Hurricane Equivalent Extratropical Storm it then dissipated completely a week later while 200 miles west of Spain.

Hurricane Gonzalo[]

Category 1 hurricane (SSHWS)
Hurricane claudette july 15 2003
DurationFebruary 28 – March 20
Peak intensity95 mph (150 km/h) (1-min) 972 mbar (hPa)

Gonzalo formed from the merger of two upper-level lows and 2 tropical waves all merged together to form a huge tropical disturbance that formed directly into Tropical Storm Gonzalo on February 28 with maxmium sustained winds of 50 mph while only 900 miles east of the leeward islands it quickly became a 95 mph Cat 1 Hurricane while only 20 miles east of the leeward islands 4 hours later, it then made landfall there at that intensity 20 minutes later it then set its sights for the US it turned to the Northwest and it made landfall in Haiti/DR Border on March 8 as a 85 mph Cat 1 Hurricane continuing Northwest it made landfall in Miami, Florida on March 13 as a 95 mph Cat 1 Hurricane it then turned west and reemerged in the Gulf of Mexico as a 70 mph Tropical Storm it then quickly restrengthened to a 95 mph Cat 1 Hurricane due to 86 °F SSTs and low wind shear it then turned Northwest again and made landfall in New Orleans, Louisiana on March 14 as a 95 mph Cat 1 Hurricane it then turned to the the North-North-East (NNE) at 40 mph and accelerated towards Toledo, Ohio while only very gradually weakening it went over Toledo as a 80 mph Cat 1 Hurricane on March 15 weakening then accelerated and it weakened into a minimal Tropical Storm 2 hours later in Toronto,Canada it then weakened into a Tropical Depression 4 hours later it then weakened into a Remnant Low with only a few showers and thunderstorms remaining associated with it it then dissipated completely on March 20 over the far northern Atlantic.

Subtropical Storm Hanna[]

Category 2 equivalent storm (NHC)
Subtropical cyclone (SSHWS)
Subtropical Storm Andrea (2007)
DurationMarch 1 – March 16 (Dissipated as a Subtropical Cyclone on March 9th)
Peak intensity175 km/h (110 mph) (1-min) 951 hPa (mbar)

Subtropical Storm Hanna formed from a upper-level low merging with a tropical wave on March 1 it quickly became Subtropical Storm Hanna with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph it wasn't tropical because the convection was 125 miles from the center of circulation and it didn't have upper level outflow, instead it had upper lever inflow it gradually strengthened into a 110 mph Subtropical Storm on March 4 even though it was at Hurricane Intensity it was not considered a hurricane because it wasn't fully tropical it held its intensity while nearing Florida it was trying to become tropical but an upper level low was still to the east of it and its convection was still in a ring 75 miles from the center of circulation and the SSTs was only 77 °F so there was only a 10% chance that it would become a fully tropical before landfall as it neared Florida on March 6 the convection was starting to go closer and closer to the circulation but it still had upper level inflow instead of outflow and the upper level even though it weakened was still right next to it to its east it then made landfall in Miami Florida as a 110 mph Subtropical Storm on March 7 it reemerged as a 100 mph Subtropical Storm in the Gulf of Mexico it restrengthened into a 110 mph Subtropical Storm though at this point of this life its more tropical then subtropical but its still doesn't have upper level outflow and there is still a upper-level low near it it then made landfall in New Orleans, Louisiana on March 7 as a 110 mph Subtropical Storm even though it had an 50 mile wide eye-like feature it wasn't fully tropical so it wasn't considered a Strong Cat 2 it quickly weakened below hurricane equivalent 6 hours later it then weakened into a 35 mph Subtropical Depression 12 hours later on March 8 it then became a Extra-tropical Storm on March 9 later over North Carolina it then remained that way until it dissipated completely on March 16 near the Azores.

Subtropical Depression Nine[]

Subtropical depression (SSHWS)
Tropical Storm Edouard (1990)
DurationMarch 2 – March 5
Peak intensity35 mph (55 km/h) (1-min) 1004 mbar (hPa)

Subtropical Depression Nine formed from two upper-level lows merging along with a tropical wave near the Bahamas On March 1 it quickly gained convection 85 miles from its center and instead of upper-level outflow it had upper-level inflow it had a upper-level low to its east it quickly became a Subtropical Depression on March 2 with maximum sustained winds of 30 mph it strengthened a little bit and on March 3 it had 35 mph winds as it was nearing Bermuda even though conditions were favorable for it to become fully tropical it still didn't because of internal mechanisms that were preventing it from making the transition to tropical it made landfall in Bermuda on March 4 still at its same intensity bringing about 4 inches of rain to Bermuda it quickly veered toward Newfoundland losing a little subtropical characteristics on the way there it then made landfall there on March 5 as a 30 mph Subtropical Depression bringing about 2-3 inches of rain to Newfoundland it dissipated 2 hours after it made landfall in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

Tropical Depression Ten[]

Tropical depression (SSHWS)
Tropical Depression One 2009 GOES
DurationMarch 3 – March 9
Peak intensity35 mph (55 km/h) (1-min) 1004 mbar (hPa)

Tropical Depression Ten formed from a mid-level low pressure system that merged with a tropical wave and the merged system was situated 600 miles east of the Leeward Islands on March 2 the merged system quickly organized its convection and on March 3 it became Tropical Depression 10 with maxmium sustained winds of 30 mph while only 100 miles east of the Leeward Islands it made landfall in St. Lucia as a slightly stronger 35 mph Tropical Depression it then started to gradually go into cooler waters and it gradually started weakening for 3 hours but then it became more organized as it it hit a patch of 83 °F SSTs that was about 234 miles wide by 69 miles in a rectangle form it at one point was developing banding features a sign of a Tropical Storm so it was so near Tropical Storm intensity a buoy actually recorded 39 mph sustained winds in its north east quadrant on March 5 but when it moved out of that warm water patch it went into 76 °F SSTs the banding features quickly dissipated and it started to weaken it was nearing landfall in Cuba and it made landfall on March 6 there as a 30 mph Tropical Depression and it stayed over Cuba for 16 hours when it reemerged into the Gulf of Mexico it was close to degenerating into a tropical wave because the convection was disorganized and it was starting to elongate but it went over 86 °F SSTs and it quickly reorganized its convection and had sustained winds of 38 mph once again on March 9 very near Tropical Storm intensity but it was near the cold front associated with the Extratropical remmants of Hanna and it got absorbed into its cold front on March 9 the remnants made it to Hanna's remnant circulation center on March 11.

Hurricane Isaias[]

Category 7 hurricane
Andrew
DurationMarch 4 – March 31
Peak intensity270 mph (435 km/h) (1-min) 821 mbar (hPa)

Isaias formed from 4 tropical waves merging 100 miles off the coast of Africa on March 3 the combined huge tropical wave directly became a 90 mph Cat 1 Hurricane on March 4 even bypassing Tropical Storm Status it quickly became a Major Hurricane a hour later and a Cat 5 Hurricane 2 hours after that, it then quickly became a 270 mph Category 7 Hurricane still 1600 miles from the leeward islands and 134 miles east of Cape Verde it turned due west and made landfall in the Cape Verde Islands as a 265 mph Cat 7 Hurricane it now has it sights set for the Leeward Islands and Ultimately the US it absorbed a Tropical Disturbance on March 10 while 800 miles from the Leeward Islands it then made landfall in St. Lucia as a 260 mph Cat 7 Hurricane it then made landfall in Cuba as a 265 mph Cat 7 Hurricane on March 25 it then made landfall in Key West, Florida as a 245 mph Cat 7 Hurricane it then turned and made landfall in Mobile, Alabama as a 270 mph Cat 7 Hurricane on March 26 it remained a cat 7 hurricane for 8 hours after landfall it then weakened below Major Hurricane Status 7 hours later it weakened below Hurricane status 6 hours later and it weakened below Storm status 16 hours later it weakened below Depression status 12 hours later while it was over Detroit, Michigan on March 27 and it remained a remnant low until it dissipated over Quebec, Canada on March 31.

Hurricane Josephine[]

Category 8 hurricane
Tip
DurationMarch 5 – April 3
Peak intensity375 mph (600 km/h) (1-min) 798 mbar (hPa)

Hurricane Josephine formed from a mid-level low merging with a surface low and a upper-level low near the Bahamas on March 5 the merger of the three basic types of lows instantly became a 100 mph Cat 2 Hurricane bypassing Tropical Storm intensity and even Cat 1 intensity it turned southeast toward the Leeward Islands and it became a 375 mph Category 8 Hurricane 3 hours later due to 116 °F SSTs and no wind shear it then brushed the Leeward Islands on March 14 as a 365 mph Cat 8 Hurricane it then headed for the Azores and made landfall there as a 350 mph Cat 8 Hurricane on March 25 it then headed for France and it made landfall there as a 370 mph Cat 8 Hurricane on March 29 it remained a Cat 8 Hurricane for 6 hours and it weakened below Major Hurricane Status 16 hours later, weakened below Hurricane status 18 hours, and it crosses the Ural Mountains into Asia still as a 95 mph Cat 1 Hurricane it weakened into a Tropical Storm 12 hours after that it then went into the West Pacific as a 45 mph Tropical Storm but it then got Absorbed into a Cat 7 Super Typhoon named Tima on April 3.

Hurricane Kyle[]

Category 9 hurricane
Andrew
DurationMarch 6 – April 24th (Dissipated as a tropical cyclone on April 10th)
Peak intensity410 mph (655 km/h) (1-min) 763 mbar (hPa)

Hurricane Kyle formed from two huge tropical waves merging along with a surface low on March 6 and it quickly became a 120 mph Category 3 Hurricane bypassing even Cat 2 intensity it then became a 410 mph Category 9 Hurricane while situated 300 miles to the east of the Leeward Islands it then made landfall in St. Vincent as a 405 mph Cat 9 Hurricane it then turned northwest and made landfall in Puerto Rico as a 400 mph Cat 9 Hurricane on March 16 still turning to the Northwest making landfall in the Bahamas as a 410 mph Cat 9 Hurricane on April 3 it then made its final landfall in Savannah, Georgia as a 410 mph Cat 9 Hurricane on April 6 it stayed as a Cat 9 Hurricane for 34 hours after landfall but it dropped below Major Hurricane Status 24 hours later, It dropped below Hurricane Status 16 hours later while it's eastern eyewall was over Toledo, it dropped below Storm status 26 hours later, and it dropped below depression status 30 hours later while 100 miles offshore of New Jersey as a remnant low on April 10 and it dissipated completely two weeks later over the Azores on April 24.

Hurricane Laura[]

Category 10 hurricane
Tip
DurationMarch 7 – April 15
Peak intensity495 mph (795 km/h) (1-min) 741 mbar (hPa)

Hurricane Laura formed from 3 huge tropical waves and then the combined wave merged with a upper-level, a mid-level low, and a surface low on March 7 and it directly became a 145 mph Cat 4 Hurricane bypassing even Cat 3 intensity while situated 50 miles off the coast of Africa it became a 495 mph Category 10 Hurricane 2 hours later it was only 5 mph away from becoming the Season's first Hypercane it headed toward the Azores and made landfall there as a 490 mph Cat 10 Hurricane on March 20 it then headed for the Leeward Islands and absorbed a unnamed Subtropical Storm it then made landfall in St. Lucia as a 485 mph Cat 10 Hurricane on April 4 it then headed for Cuba and it made landfall there as a 480 mph Cat 10 Hurricane it then headed for Galveston, Texas on April 8 as a 495 mph Cat 10 Hurricane it remained a Cat 10 Hurricane for 3 days as it went toward Ohio it dropped below major hurricane status 2 days later while its western eyewall was over Toledo, it dropped below hurricane status 18 hours later while over New York, New York it then continued to weakened due to 79 °F SSTs and 6 hours later it weakened below storm status it then dissipated the next day 400 miles south of Newfoundland on April 15.

Super Hypercane Marco[]

Super Hypercane
Hypotheticalhypercaneeg0
DurationMarch 8 – September 3 (Crossed over to the Pacific on May 16th and merged with a Extratropical Storm on August 16th)
Peak intensity1100 mph (1770 km/h) (1-min) 543 mbar (hPa)

Marco formed from a mid-level low merging with a surface low that also merged with a colossal Tropical Wave it instantly became a 165 mph Category 5 Hurricane On March 8 skipping even Category 4 Intensity it became a 1100 mph Super Hypercane 6 hours later due to 120 °F SSTs and no wind shear while 400 miles off the coast of Africa it then headed for the Lesser Antilles and made landfall in Martinique as a 1070 mph Super Hypercane on March 20 it then curved toward Bermuda and made landfall there as 1085 mph Super Hypercane on April 8 it then turned southwest and made landfall in Andros Island in the Bahamas on April 17 it then turned west-southeast (WSE) toward Africa and made landfall there as a 1100 mph Super Hypercane in the Sahara Desert on April 31 and brought a lot of beneficial rain there. it then turned back to the west and headed for Honduras and Made landfall there as 1095 mph Super Hypercane it then crossed into the Pacific Ocean on the afternoon of May 16 still as a 1000 mph Super Hypercane it then spent 3 months in the Pacific Ocean before dissipating in Anchorage, Alaska after making landfall in the Southern Coast of Alaska on August 16 as a 190 mph Cat 5 Hurricane it then weakened below hurricane status just 2 hours because of very cold dry air getting entrained into the circulation, afterwards it then made it to Anchorage still as a moderately strong 55 mph Tropical Storm it then merged with a powerful Arctic Front coming from the North Pole it then merged with the low attached to the front, and, because of the very warm remnants of the storm interacted with the frigid air associated with the Extratropical Storm, it itself then strengthened into a unusually strong Cat 5 Equivalent Extratropical Storm with a unusually low central pressure of 882 millibars and winds of 200 mph and gusts to 269 mph it then made it to the US and it went over the entire Pacific Northwest, on August 28 it made landfall in Portland,Oregon still as a Cat 5 Equivalent Extratropical Storm it still had a unusually low pressure of 896 millibars it still had unusually high winds of 175 mph on August 30 it then weakened slowly over the US and reemerged still as a Cat 2 Equivalent Extratropical Storm with winds still packing 110 mph gusting to 160 mph and a central pressure of 957 millibars, it gave the entire US 12-18 inches of rain, but it then got absorbed into a much stronger and bigger Extratropical Storm that came from Eastern Canada on September 3 while the low itself was exactly between Newfoundland and Bermuda.

Hypercane Nana[]

Hypercane
Hypotheticalhypercaneeg0
DurationMarch 9 – May 1
Peak intensity745 mph (1200 km/h) (1-min) 678 mbar (hPa)

Nana formed from 3 tropical disturbances and a tropical wave merging on March 9 it instantly became a 230 mph Category 6 Hurricane it then became a 745 mph Hypercane on March 12 it then headed for the Leeward Islands and made landfall in the island of Barbados on March 21 as a 740 mph Hypercane it then headed for the Azores and it almost made it there before being turned back around by a developing ridge over the Azores on April 4 it then headed for Cuba and it made landfall there as a 735 mph Hypercane on April 16 it then headed for the Yucatan Peninsula and made landfall there on April 20 as a 710 mph Hypercane it then reemerged in the Bay of Campeche as a 695 mph Hypercane it then restrengthened into a 740 mph Hypercane it then made landfall in Tampico,Mexico as a slightly stronger 745 mph Hypercane on April 27 it then curved towards the Southwest United States making it there as a 80 mph Hurricane bringing well needed rain to the entire Southwest on April 29 it then rapidly weakened to a Tropical Depression early on April 30 it then became a remnant low in the Afternoon hours on April 30 it then dissipated completely over Montana on May 1.

Megacane Omar[]

Megacane
Hypotheticalhypercaneeg0
DurationMarch 10 – April 16
Peak intensity1600 mph (2580 km/h) (1-min) 432 mbar (hPa)

Omar formed from a tropical wave merging with a tropical disturbance on March 10 it then quickly became a 185 mph Cat 5 Hurricane 3 hours after the merger it then rapidly strengthened into a Cat 1 Megacane with sustained winds of 1600 mph 8 hours later on March 11 it then headed for Africa and made landfall there as a 1590 mph Megacane on March 31 it then made it 300 miles inland bringing 3–6 feet of well needed rain to Africa before turning around it reemerged a day later still as a 1400 mph Megacane it then headed for the Leeward Islands it then made landfall in St.Lucia as a 1585 mph Megacane it then headed for Cuba and then ultimately the US it made landfall in Cuba as a stronger 1600 mph Megacane it then headed for the Southeast coast of the United States but it got stalled only 20 miles south of Mobile,Alabama it then weakened significantly as it upwelled much colder water it then weakened into a Category 6 Hurricane with winds of 215 mph it then made landfall in Mobile,Alabama as a 210 mph Cat 6 Hurricane on April 14 it then stayed as a Cat 6 for about 4 hours but rapid weakening occurred after that it weakened from a 190 mph Cat 5 Hurricane to a Tropical Depression in only an hour it then became a remnant low only 2 hours after that it then dissipated completely on April 16 over Lansing,Michigan its cloud remnants then got absorbed into a incoming cold front on April 17.

Megacane Paulette[]

Category 2 megacane
Hypotheticalhypercaneeg0
DurationMarch 11 – April 16
Peak intensity2500 mph (4025 km/h) (1-min) 321 mbar (hPa)

Paulette was formed from a unbelievable 16 tropical waves merging into a huge well defined tropical wave on late on March 10 it then directly became a 220 mph Cat 6 Hurricane early on March 11 with a well defined eye and very good outflow on all sides of it it then became a Cat 2 Megacane the next day on March 12 it then curved towards Bermuda and it missed the island by about 500 miles to the east of the island it almost became extra-tropical on March 31 as it was attached to a cold front but it then seperated from the cold front before it became completely extra-tropical but it quickly regained the bit of tropical characteristics that it lost it then headed for the US but a weak Trough of Low Pressure was already protecting the Eastern US it then broke through the Trough and dissipated it as it got absorbed into the megacane it then hit North Carolina as a 2225 mph Cat 2 Megacane on April 7 it only got 20 miles inland before turning back into the Atlantic on April 8 it then slammed into North Carolina again on April 13 but this time it stayed in the US for good this time nit it only gradually weakened and its eye didn't even begin to become cloud filled until April 15 after that it quickly weakened into a Tropical Storm on April 16 it then dissipated 2 hours later due to a cold front behind elongating its circulation it then merged with the circulation center and it dissipated as it became completely absorbed into the Cold Front and into the Low Pressure Center that was attached to it but that caused it to become a Cat 4 Equivalent Extra-tropical storm on April 18 it then weakened back into a normal Extra-tropical Storm the next day.

Major Megacane Quinn[]

Category 3 megacane
Tip
DurationMarch 12, as of 1 PM EST – June 20
Peak intensity3400 mph (5475 km/h) (1-min) 210 mbar (hPa)

Quinn formed from 2 huge tropical waves merging over the central Atlantic it then quickly blossomed into a Cat 5 Hurricane just 2 hours after the merger it then ascended up the ranks rapidly and it became a Category 3 Megacane on the next day on March 13 it then headed to the Azores and it made landfall in one of the Islands of the Azores on March 31 as a 3300 mph Cat 3 Megacane it then headed back towards the Carribean and it made landfall in Cuba as a 3390 mph Major Megacane it then headed for the Far Northern Atlantic it stalled over Newfoundland for about a month it then headed south towards Bermuda still as a 3100 mph Major Megacane on April 31 it then headed for Africa but before it could get even halfway there a infinite storm was already heading there so it went southeast around the stronger storm even though their convection was merging a little they then seperated from each other one going west and the other east it then headed for the US on May 23 but a trough of low pressure was already protecting the Eastern US from anymore blows from tropical cyclones so it curved around the trough and went back toward Africa again but sixty tropical waves merged with it during the way there and when the 60th one merged with it, it turned it to the west on June 7 it then hit the US on June 16th it made landfall in Charleston,South Carolina it lasted 3 days as a megacane before rapidly weakening on June 20 rapidly weakening from a Hypercane to a Tropical Depression in 4 hours it then dissipated completely in the late evening hours on June 20 while it was on top of Columbus,Ohio its remnant clouds, though it merged with a trough of low pressure it then went toward the far southern North Atlantic and the circulation center detached from the trough, and became a  strong surface low that gained alot of Convection over the Center of Circulation and it became a Tropical Invest Area on June 30 but it never became a Tropical Depression again even though it had a 75% chance of redevelopment and it simply dissipated completely the next day on July 1 due to very strong wind shear.

Superstorm Rene[]

Superstorm
Hypotheticalhypercaneeg0
DurationMarch 12, as of 2 PM EST – September 28 (Traveled across the entire world on May 1st and made it back to the Atlantic on September 9th)
Peak intensity6900 mph (11100 km/h) (1-min) 111 mbar (hPa)

Rene formed from 10 tropical waves merging over the far eastern Atlantic near Africa the merger of the 10 waves on March 12 it rapidly became a Cat 10 only 2 hours later it then became a 6900 mph Superstorm only 4 hours after that it then stalled 300 miles to the west of the Leeward Islands on March 30 for about a month barely losing any intensity it then started to move west again on April 30 it then rapidly moved through the Atlantic and reemerged in the East Pacific as a 6450 mph Superstorm it then went around the whole world plowing through every landmass except the North Pole barely and the Northern Half of Alaska losing any intensity as it went through all the continents causing 6 feet of rain in every continent in the Northern Hemisphere it then dipped down into Africa on September 5 it then headed back into the Atlantic and made it back into the North Atlantic still as a 5555 mph Superstorm on September 9 it then headed for the US and it still had a crystal clear eye despite going over tens of thousands of miles of land it then made landfall in South Carolina on September 19 it lasted a couple of days as a Superstorm but it quickly weakened once it went over top of the Appalachian Mountains it quickly weakened into a Megacane 1 day after that it then weakened into a Category 6 Hurricane 4 days after that weakening accelerated when it went over the Rocky Mountains it quickly weakened below Major Hurricane Status that same day it then went up into Canada it crossed the Border barely holding on as a Hurricane it then weakened into a Tropical Storm about 200 miles into Canada it then merged with a cold front and it finally became Extra-tropical on September 28 it then dissipated that same day over High Northern Canada over Baffin Island the good news is the second time it hit the US it brought well needed rain to it because it was a little dry over the US it got anywhere between 4 and 6 feet of rain.

Infinite Storm Sally[]

Infinite Storm
Tip
DurationMarch 13 6 AM EST – May 28 (Crossed into the Northern East Pacific off the Coast of the Western US on May 22nd)
Peak intensity100000 mph (160900 km/h) (1-min) -1600 mbar (hPa)

Sally formed from a mesoscale convective thunderstorm complex that merged with a tropical wave on March 12 it then gradually organized into a broad area of low pressure it then skipped even storm status and went directly into a 75 mph Cat 1 Hurricane because it already had sustained hurricane force winds and a well defined eye it then rapidly became a Hypercane on March 14 it then quickly ascended through the ranks and it became a 100,000 mph Infinite Storm it then did a huge counter-clockwise loop 1000 miles in diameter and it headed for the US only ever so slowly weakening it then stalled over the Northern North Atlantic for about an unusual 2 weeks absorbing a lot of extra-tropical storms into itself and once they merged with it they quickly disintegerated and their frontal systems and the lows themselves would rapidly dissipate and become part of the Infinite Storm some however the lows would actually make into its eye and make it even stronger, it then headed back to Africa and made landfall there as a 99,995 mph Infinite Storm on April 3 it then went as far as 500 miles inland it then absorbed 10 tropical waves and 6 tropical disturbances before reemerging back into the Atlantic still as a 75,000 mph Infinite Storm on April 11 it then headed back towards the US and it got stalled again and this time its western eyewall was over Bermuda and it stalled there for about 1 and a half weeks it then almost wiped Bermuda off the map because it brought 12 feet of rain to Bermuda even a inch more would of been enough to make it become part of the Ocean it then turned southeast and it once again headed for Africa and it made landfall in Mauritania in Africa as a 98,000 mph Infinite Storm on April 27 and it made it as far as Western Sudan before once again turning back towards the Atlantic it then made once again back into the Atlantic as a 69,000 mph Infinite Storm on May 1 it then once again headed for the US and it made it closer to the US this time and missed it by only 100 miles to the east of Cape Hatteras, NC but it then turned around and made landfall as a 99,975 mph Infinite Storm on May 20 it made to the Pacific Side of the Western US still as a Major Hurricane of 115 mph on May 22 it brought a 8–12 feet of rain to the entire US causing major flooding everywhere it then restrengthened into a 160 mph Cat 5 near Hawaii but it encountered Hawaii's Strong Protective Ridge and it rapidly weakened from a Cat 5 to a strong 70 mph Tropical Storm in 3 hours during that time it lost its eye and eyewall in about 2 and a half hours it then made landfall in Honolulu on May 27 as a 60 mph Tropical Storm due to land interaction and decreasing sea surface temperatures and high wind shear it rapidly dissipated the next day 300 miles west of Hawaii.

Hyper Mini Black Hole Thomas[]

Hyper Mini Black Hole
Tip
DurationOctober 10, 1985 – May 9, 15,001
Peak intensityINF mph (INF km/h) (1-min) -INF mbar (hPa)


See this for its entire life story:  Hyper Mini Black Hole Thomas

It won't return again in the Atlantic until June 1, it is currently in the West Pacific sucking in and absorbing lots of Super Typhoons of all intensities and all other tropical cyclones of all intensites even all other Mini Black Holes,and Super Mini Black Holes because now it is a Hyper Mini Black Hole. So far this year it has absorbed 69 Tropical Cyclones bringing how many Tropical Cyclones it has absorbed in its entire life to a incredible: 1,069 Tropical Cyclones. (its Southern Hemisphere Twin named Anti-Thomas has also absorbed that many too!!) 

There has been 1 documented case of a hurricane that formed from a very weak circulation center 2000 miles south of Thomas's eye on February 28, 1997 that detached from Thomas's Circulation on March 1, 1997 and it became a Category 5 Hurricane on March 2, 1997 it only lasted a few days until it got sucked into and absorbed back into Thomas's Circulation and got recycled back into its circulation on March 5, 1997 (It's Southern Hemisphere Twin also did this exact same thing in the same year at the same time)

Snowstorm Teddy-Umi[]

Snowcane
Tip
DurationMarch 13 – March 24
Peak intensity200 mph (325 km/h) (1-min) 852 mbar (hPa)


Snowcane Teddy formed like most formerly "tropical" cyclones do from a tropical wave coming off of Africa and it became a Category 5 Hurricane on March 13 but it went through a unusual 2000 mile wide by 1000 mile Iceberg in the Southern North Atlantic it then picked up the entire glacier into it and became a Snowstorm on March 14 but it was still a Category 5 Equivalent it then tracked towards the US struggling to gain tropical characteristics it started to gain some showers and Wintry Mix and Freezing Rain in the circulation that were trying to overthrow the snowstorms that were dominating the circulation, but it lost it then made landfall in Mobile, Alabama as a 200 mph Snowcane/Snowstorm on March 18 it brought 8–12 feet of Snow to the Southeast coast and 24 foot storm surge it covered the and 4–6 feet of Snow to the Midwest which included Ohio,Kentucky,Michigan,Wisconsin,Illinois,and Indiana Northeast in 2–4 feet of Snow as since it was not really tropical since its 1st day of existence it only very very slowly weakened and it stayed as a Cat 5 Equivalent Storm all the way back into the Atlantic Side of the Eastern US it then reentered the Atlantic on March 20 as a 165 mph Snowcane/Snowstorm with still a very well defined eye but it turned south-south-east (SSE) and it started to weaken, weakening below Cat 5 Equivalent 6 hours later it then weakened below hurricane equivalent on March 22 it then made landfall in Charleston, South Carolina on March 23 as a 50 mph Snowstorm/Snowcane it then quickly weakened into a tropical depression equivalent it then became a remnant low pressure area with only a few snow showers associated with it, it then dissipated completely on March 24 over Toledo, Ohio, but however its remnant snow clouds went and merged with a low pressure area over Iowa and it transformed into a snowstorm and it dumped an additional foot of snow over the Midwest and the Northeast it itself then dissipated only 2 hours after entering the North Atlantic.

Firecane Vicky[]

Firecane
Tip
DurationMarch 13 as of 7 AM EST – March 24
Peak intensity200 mph (325 km/h) (1-min) 854 mbar (hPa)

Vicky formed like most storms do from a tropical wave coming off of Africa on March 13 but unlike most storms it went over a huge oil fire 1000 miles in diameter in the water so it picked all of it up and became a 200 mph Firecane and instead of rain falling huge embers were falling down from the sky it then made landfall in Houston, Texas on March 17 but since it was mostly made of fire now it very slowly weakened over the US making it as far as Idaho before weakening below hurricane force equivalent it caused a whole bunch of wildfires in every state in went through it then merged with a cold front on March 21 that had a bunch of rain and moisture associated with it finally put out the Firecane causing so much steam it could be seen very clearly from space on March 22 its remnant low pressure area then became filled up with rain within the cold front it then seperated itself from the cold front and put out all the wildfires it caused it then went towards the lower latitudes in the North Atlantic and became a Tropical Invest area but since it no longer had a low-level circulation and only a upper-level one if it reorganized into a named storm it would have a different name it never reorganized into a named storm it then simply dissipated completely on March 24.

Lightningcane Wilfred[]

Lightningcane
Tip
DurationMarch 13 as of 8 AM EST – March 24
Peak intensity200 mph (325 km/h) (1-min) 850 mbar (hPa)


Wilfred developed from a very good looking Tropical Invest area on March 13 but unlike most storms it developed huge amounts of Lightning with it and because it was over very warm sea surface temperatures it quickly became a 200 mph Lightningcane it then was threatening to absorb TI 26 and STI 27 but it went too fast for it to absorb them so it went toward the US and made landfall in Savannah, Georgia on March 22 and it caused a lot of damage from hundreds of thousands of lightning strikes hitting the State in a very short period like a normal tropical cyclone it weakened over land it merged with a powerful cold front on March 24 as a 100 mph Lightningcane it then after it dissipated completely it gave the cold front a bunch of lightning through Wilfred's remnant thunderstorms with overactive lightning it then went to the low latitudes and developed into another invest area setting the stage for another lightningcane to occur.

Tropical Invest 26[]

Tropical Invest (NHC)
Invest 92L
DurationMarch 13 as of 9 AM EST – March 24
Peak intensity30 mph (45 km/h) (1-min) 1005 mbar (hPa)

TI 26 has a 40% chance (Moderate) of becoming a Tropical Depression or Tropical Storm in the next 48 hours because convection has greatly flared up over the system over the last few hours and it now is covering the enitre circulation center its chances will probably be increased to 80% later today if it continues to present a great sattelite image and if it develops even more convection, due to its close proximity to Lightningcane Wilfred it will either explosively develop into a Cat 5 Hurricane or it will get absorbed into Wilfred or possibly turn to the east and merge with Subtropical Invest 27 to its east and the combined system would rapidly develop into a tropical storm even though thats only a 40% chance of happening.The More likely result is it will get absorbed into Wilfred and its remnant circulation will go the center of Wilfred's eye and it will make Wilfred slightly stronger but thats still only about a 50% chance that even that would happen theres also a 10% chance of it leading its own seperate life and become a 190 mph Category 5 Hurricane in the next 5 days if it remains a seperate storm. Even though the chances were on its side it never developed into anything more and on March 24 it merged along with STI 27 with a Cold Front associated with Wilfred's Remnant overactive lightning storms, it dissipated only 3 hours after it merged with the cold front associated with the Remnants of Wilfred.

Suptropical Invest 27[]

Subtropical Invest (NHC)
Invest 92L
DurationMarch 13 as of 10 AM EST – March 24
Peak intensity30 mph (45 km/h) (1-min) 1005 mbar (hPa)

STI 27 has a 70% chance (High) of becoming a Subtropical Depression or Subtropical Storm in the next 48 hours because convection has greatly flared up into a ring 116 miles from its center of circulation and its showing excellent upper level inflow thats needed to be a true Subtropical Cyclone and it has a developing upper level low to its east so thats another reason why it has a high chance of becoming a Subtropical Cyclone soon, it is in close proximity to Tropical Invest 26 and theres a 70% chance that they will merge and rapidly intensify into a Cat 10 Hurricane because the merged system will turn west and go over 110 °F SSTs and there will be very little if not no wind shear for the rest of the merged or both of their life (lives) so far as depicted by forecast models and intensity models theres a almost 100% chance (Very High) that if STI 27 and TI 26 merged the merged system would rapidly become a Tropical Storm and then explosively intensify into a Cat 10 Hurricane in 16 hours after becoming a named storm because of the conditions that are described above and because of forecast models and intensity models or even though its a slight chance it could lead its own seperate life and become a 90 mph Subtropical Storm. Even though the chances were on its side it never developed into anything more and on March 24 it merged along with TI 26 with a Cold Front associated with Wilfred's Remnant overactive lightning storms, it dissipated only 2 hours after it merged with the cold front associated with the Remnants of Wilfred.

Extratropical Storm Xavier[]

Extratropical storm (NHC)
Hurricane Rafael Edited 2
DurationMarch 14 – March 20
Peak intensity70 mph (110 km/h) (1-min) 996 mbar (hPa)

Extratropical Storm Xavier was originally thought to have been a strong tropical storm even though it had a little bit of a tail to coming into a ball of convection associated with "Xavier" which was thought to have not of been a cold front but in Post-storm analysis they found that the tail had a significant temperature difference ahead and behind the tail signified that it was a extratropical cyclone the whole time but they did not count it into the Season's total ACE because of that shocking news.

"Xavier's" Meterological History

"Xavier" was formed from a disturbance in the jet stream associated with a huge burst of convection on March 13 just off the East Coast, it then organized into a "Tropical Depression" on March 14 it then headed for Bermuda while strengthening into a 70 mph "Tropical Storm" the "tail" passed by Bermuda but the people of Bermuda found and felt a huge temperature drop behind the "tail" on March 17, the ball of convection that fooled the NHC died down into just isolated convective bands being fed into its circulation center by its "tail" which was later found to have been its cold front from the beginning it then occluded on March 18 it then started to rapidly weaken and it then unexpectedly dissipated completely on March 20.

Extratropical Depression Two[]

Extratropical depression (NHC)
Hurricane Rafael Edited 2
DurationMarch 22 – March 26
Peak intensity35 mph (55 km/h) (1-min) 1000 mbar (hPa)

Extratropical Depression 29 was formed from a another huge disturbance in the Jet Stream it was originally to have thought to have been a "tropical" depression even though it had a little bit of a tail when it passed over Bermuda it's tail passed through it they detected a huge temperature drop behind it and that signified that it was a extratropical cyclone from the beginning.

Extratropical Depression Two's Meterological History

ED 23 was formed from a disturbance in the jet stream associated with a huge burst of convection on March 21 just off the East Coast, it then organized into a "Tropical Depression" on March 18 it then headed for Bermuda while strengthening into a 35 mph "Tropical Depression" the "tail" passed by Bermuda but the people of Bermuda found and felt a huge temperature drop behind the "tail" on March 22, the ball of convection that fooled the NHC died down into just isolated convective bands being fed into its circulation center by its "tail" which was later found to have been its cold front from the beginning it then occluded on March 24 it then started to rapidly weaken and it then unexpectedly dissipated completely on March 26.

Tropical Storm Yera[]

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
Ophelia3
DurationMarch 25 – March 31
Peak intensity65 mph (100 km/h) (1-min) 994 mbar (hPa)

Yera formed from a complex interaction of a tropical wave merging with a trough and a upper level low near the East Coast on March 25. It gradually gained convection over its low level circulation center, it then gained enough convection to become Tropical Depression 30. It only slowly strengthened into a tropical storm, then on March 27 it strengthened into a Tropical Storm and was named "Yera". It then gradually intensified during that day to its peak intensity of 65 mph and its lowest central pressure of 994 mph near the coast of North Carolina with a developing eye and eyewall. However it made landfall in North Carolina at that same intensity. It slowly weakened during that day, it weakened into a tropical depression on March 29 near West Virigina it then weakened into a remnant low. The low dissipated completely on March 31 while it was over Georgia.

Hurricane Zeke[]

Category 1 hurricane (SSHWS)
Hurricane Ophelia Oct 1 2011 1425Z
DurationMarch 29 – April 4
Peak intensity85 mph (140 km/h) (1-min) 974 mbar (hPa)

Zeke formed from a upper level low merging with a tropical wave near Bermuda, it became Tropical Depression Thirty One on March 29. It strengthened into a 50 mph tropical storm 6 hours later and it was named "Zeke". It gradually strengthened and it became a hurricane on April 1. It then raced off to the east at 40 mph ahead of a fast approaching cold front. It however only strengthened into a 85 mph Category 1 hurricane on April 2, by April 3 it had merged with the cold front and started to rapidly weaken, by April 4 it was absorbed into the cold front.

Tropical Storm Alpha[]

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
Tropical Storm Heather 1969
DurationMarch 31 – April 1
Peak intensity45 mph (75 km/h) (1-min) 1004 mbar (hPa)


Alpha was a weak and short lived tropical storm. Alpha formed from a tropical wave gaining a low level circulation and significant convection. On March 31 it was directly upgraded to a tropical storm and was named "Alpha". Though it didn't last long as high wind shear and rapidly decreasing sea surface temperatures started to rapidly weaken it. By the early morning hours of April 1 it was only a tropical depression with only a little bit of convection left on its northwest side, by the afternoon hours it had dissipated.


Hurricane Beta[]

Category 2 hurricane (SSHWS)
Typhoon Durian 03 dec 2006 0530Z
DurationApril 1 – April 14
Peak intensity105 mph (165 km/h) (1-min) 964 mbar (hPa)


Beta was a moderate hurricane. Beta formed on April 1 by a surface low gaining enough convection and organization to become Tropical Depression Thirty-three while between Africa and the Leeward islands it only slowly intensified due to the remnants of Alpha producing wind shear over initially, but Alpha quickly dissipated and allowed the depression to intensify further. On April 2 it intensified into a tropical storm and was named "Beta", it looked pretty good on the first visible images of the storm. On April 3 it was nearing hurricane status as the sustained winds were 70 mph and a well defined developing eye was forming, later that afternoon it was upgraded into a hurricane as it sustained winds were upped to 80 mph, on April 4 it became a Category 2 hurricane and then on its next advisory it reached its peak intensity of 105 mph and a pressure of 964 millibars it then maintained that intensity for a few days. By April 8 it started to slowly deteriorate as the eye became cloud filled and its northern eyewall started to break, later that day it weakened into a Category 1 hurricane but the weakening continued with it dropping below hurricane status on April 10. Though on April 11 it unexpectedly started to strengthen back into a Category 1 hurricane it reached its second peak intensity of 90 mph it maintained that intensity for about 12 hours, but by the afternoon it started weakening again, but for good this time. By the afternoon hours of April 12 it had weakened into a tropical storm because of decreasing sea surface temperatures and it was still 130 miles east of the Leeward islands, The hurricane warning and watches for them was downgraded to tropical storm warnings and watches. On April 13 it had deteriorated to a tropical depression and with that all warnings for the Leeward islands were discontinued. It finally weakened into a remnant low on April 14 and it then finally dissipated later that afternoon.


Beta was the longest lasting April hurricane in recorded history lasting almost 2 weeks, even though it lasted that long it never made a single landfall.

Hurricane Gamma[]

Category 4 hurricane (SSHWS)
TY Yagi 2006-09-22 0656Z VIS
DurationApril 4 – April 16 (Became Extratropical on April 12)
Peak intensity150 mph (240 km/h) (1-min) 922 mbar (hPa)

Gamma formed from a complex interaction involving a surface low, upper level low and a weak tropical wave that merged together on April 3. At first the merged system only had sporadic convection and was asymmetrical, but on April 4 it gained more convection over it and it quickly became a tropical storm and was named "Gamma". It started explosively intensifying on April 6 going from a 70 mph tropical storm to a 150 mph Category 4 hurricane in just 18 hours, it then peaked several hours later at the same wind speed but a lower pressure of 922 millibars and it maintained that intensity for about 36 hours before it entered unfavorable conditions and started weakening on April 7. By the afternoon it had been downgraded into a weak Category 3 hurricane but weakening still continued weakening below major hurricane status that evening and then bottoming out as a 75 mph Category 1 hurricane, but favorable conditions returned and it started rapid restrengthening on April 8 from a Category 1 to a 145 mph Category 4 hurricane in just 14 hours it reached it second peak intensity as a 145 mph storm maintaining that intensity for about 3 days. On April 11 it encountered unfavorable conditions again and started weakening for good while it was still in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, weakening below major hurricane status later that day. On April 12 it had weakened from a Category 2 hurricane to a Category 1 and weakening still continued but before it could weaken below hurricane status it merged with a frontal system and quickly began its extratropical transition and it completed it later that day and the final advisory was put on Post-tropical Storm Gamma. Even though it was now Extratropical it maintained hurricane equivalent intensity for 24 hours before weakening below hurricane equivalent on April 14. Its frontal systems unexpectedly dissipated beneath it on April 15 and all that was left was its remnant circulation center and that lasted to April 16 when it dissipated completely then over the Azores.

Subtropical Storm Delta[]

Subtropical storm (SSHWS)
Category 1 equivalent storm
Subtropical Storm
DurationApril 8 – April 13 (Became Extratropical on April 12)
Peak intensity85 mph (140 km/h) (1-min) 972 mbar (hPa)

Delta formed from a frontal system going over 76 °F sea surface temperatures on April 7 over the course of a day it detached from its frontal systems and gained more convection over the low itself. On April 8 it became Subtropical Storm Delta with winds of 45 mph over the course of a day and on April 9 its sustained winds nearly doubled to 85 mph, It was now hurricane equivalent and it maintained that intensity for about 2 days, then on April 11 it went over colder sea surface temperatures and started to weaken dropping below hurricane equivalent on its next advisory. Weakening continued as it became a Subtropical Depression with winds of 35 mph on April 12 while near Bermuda. It then merged with a cold front and quickly became extratropical later that day, the extratropical remnants were absorbed into a much stronger and bigger Extratropical Cyclone on April 13.

Hurricane Epsilon[]

Category 5 hurricane (SSHWS)
TY Yagi 2006 09 21 1130Z
DurationApril 11 – April 14
Peak intensity180 mph (285 km/h) (1-min) 902 mbar (hPa)

Epsilon formed from a upper level low becoming a surface low and gaining more convection over it on April 10. On April 11 it became a tropical storm and was named "Epsilon". It then explosively intensified from a 50 mph tropical storm to a 180 mph Category 5 hurricane in just 16 hours the rapid intensification was possible because of very high sea surface temperatures and no wind shear. It maintained this intensity for about 15 hours before it underwent a eyewall replacement cycle. It weakened down to a 140 mph Category 4 hurricane, but the eyewall replacement cycle soon completed and it restrengthened to its second peak intensity as a 175 mph Category 5 hurricane and its eye was now 55 miles in diameter. It maintained that intensity for about 36 hours before it started to rapidly weaken on April 13 due to increasing wind shear and decreasing sea surface temperatures. Later that day it weakened below major hurricane status and it still continued to rapidly weaken. On April 14 it weakened below hurricane status as its eye and eyewall dissipated it then was ahead of a approaching cold front and it accelerated ahead of it but the cold front caught up to it and absorbed it later that day.

Tropical Depression Thirty-seven[]

Tropical depression (SSHWS)
Hurricane Glenda 1969
DurationApril 13 – April 14
Peak intensity30 mph (45 km/h) (1-min) 1010 mbar (hPa)


Tropical Depression 37 was a weak and short lived tropical depression. It formed on April 13 from a tropical wave gaining enough organization to become a tropical depression, it had sustained winds of 30 mph and a central pressure of 1010 millibars. It did not strengthen from that because high wind shear started destroying it late on April 13. The next day on April 14 remaining without convection for 12 hours it was now a remnant low, the low dissipated completely due to the extremely high wind shear later that day.

Mini Black Hole Zeta[]

Mini Black Hole (NHC)
Tip
DurationApril 15 – April 14, 2234
Peak intensity1496300 mph (2407600 km/h) (1-min) -2000 mbar (hPa)

Zeta formed from a tropical wave merging with a trough and a upper level low on April 14. On April 15 it directly became a hurricane and it was named "Zeta". It went over a undersea volcanic eruption and that increased the sea surface temperatures to a never before seen 160 °F with that it rapidly intensified into a Mini Black Hole with winds of 1,496,300 mph it then quickly crossed into the Pacific and went across the world but carefully behind Super Mini Black Hole Thomas and it last over 200 years it finally met its end when it got absorbed into Thomas on April 14, 2234. Overall in the Atlantic in 2014 it caused $1.3 Trillion USD in damages then across the world it caused quintillions of dollars worth of damage and it caused that every year up til 2234.

Tropical Storm Eta[]

Tropical storm (SSHWS)
Shanshan 11 sept 2006 0550Z
DurationApril 19 – April 25
Peak intensity60 mph (95 km/h) (1-min) 999 mbar (hPa)

Eta formed from a tropical wave merging with another one near Cape Verde Islands near Africa on April 18. On April 19 it became a tropical depression and was assigned the number "39". It became a tropical storm 6 hours later and was named "Eta" while 300 miles off the coast of Africa. It gradually strengthened further to a 60 mph Tropical Storm while it was midway between Africa and the Leeward Islands on April 21. It then started to encounter wind shear and it started gradually weaken into a minimal tropical storm with winds of 40 mph and its convection only on its west side on April 22. However the wind shear subsided and it gradual restrengthened back to a 55 mph Tropical Storm as convection was now surrounding the entire circulation center that ended up being its secondary peak intensity on April 23, however wind shear came back into the region and started to shear away Eta and this time for good. By April 24 it was a tropical depression with winds of 30 mph and close to degenerating into a tropical wave and convection as once again only on its west side, on April 25 it had degenerated into a tropical wave and the last advisory was issued on it. The remnant tropical wave dissipated completely later that day.

Subtropical Storm Theta[]

Subtropical storm (SSHWS)
Category 2 equivalent storm
Subtropical Storm
DurationApril 21 – May 1
Peak intensity110 mph (175 km/h) (1-min) 1001 mbar (hPa)

Theta formed from a subtropical wave merging with a subtropical disturbance and a subtropical invest, on April 21. The new storm was intercepted by a hurricane hunters flight, which reported a closed circulation. It already had winds of 45 mph, and thus when the closed circulation was found it was named Subtropical Storm Theta.

Near New York it hit a "sweet spot" of warm water, and in a mere 5 hours it had category 2 equivalent winds. It then slammed into New York, killing hundreds from the Storm surge and tornadoes.

Advertisement