The Great Hurricane Drought of 2025

Bring em on. My property is dry as a bone. Won't be long until the ground starts to crack open if we don't get some decent rain soon.
 
We get out best weather of the year here in The West when hurricanes are crashing Florida ... usually Texas too but not as regularly ... 80ºF, 15% RH, light breeze from the North ...

Y'all done did jinx yourselfs is what y'all done did ...
 
Speaking of droughts it seems 3/4 of the continental US is in one.

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Speaking of droughts it seems 3/4 of the continental US is in one.

View attachment 1163711

This is just a colored map ... what is the source, I'd like to read the legend ...

I ask because it shows my part of the world in drought and that's plainly not the case ... all this shows is half the US is at below average rainfall ... which is average ... besides, global warming alleviates drought ...

Pfffft ... we're above average rainfall and the map shows us in "severe drought" ... I can see why the authors didn't want their names associated with this tripe ...
 
Another failed warmest/alarmist failure as the Hurricanes are poor this year and few tropical development, the water temperature isn't problem at all which more than warm enough.

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Irrational Fear

The Great Hurricane Drought of 2025

Exposing the Gap Between "Supercharged" Predictions and a Hurricane Season That Never Peaked​

Dr. Matthew Wielicki
Sep 16, 2025

Paid

Excerpt:

Free section (public)​

I’ve been monitoring the Colorado State University (CSU) real-time hurricane dashboard for weeks now: tropical.atmos.colostate.edu/Realtime/index.php?loc=northatlantic. Scroll down to the storm-by-storm table and the Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) plot; they tell a story that's far from the "supercharged" nightmare we've been sold.

Don't just take my word for it. Pull up the official 2025 storm list, then eye the ACE curve. ACE, accumulated cyclone energy, measures the total strength and duration of storms; it's like a season's energy scorecard. When no named storms form, the energy flatlines. On CSU's graph, you'll see that the stall is clear as day, especially through the peak around September 10th. The data? It's not matching the dire predictions.

Meanwhile, the media machine churns out alarmist headlines (while never mentioning the hurricane drought):

LINK

Maybe these Blue Holes are sucking them up?



 
Fact is Florida is dying in many ways. Beaches are full of bacteria, fish are spinning in filth and swordfish are beaching themselves.


Invasive snakes killing wildlife in worlds largest swamp,
 
Fact is Florida is dying in many ways. Beaches are full of bacteria, fish are spinning in filth and swordfish are beaching themselves.


Invasive snakes killing wildlife in worlds largest swamp,


The biggest problem are the filthy humans ... pissing and shitting everyplace ... 10 times the wildlife destruction getting hit on the roads ... more than some stupid snake can imagine ...

The problems in Florida are due to urbanization ...
 
The biggest problem are the filthy humans ... pissing and shitting everyplace ... 10 times the wildlife destruction getting hit on the roads ... more than some stupid snake can imagine ...

The problems in Florida are due to urbanization ...

This too is true,maily because most people illegally and legal who come to this USA like the climate and water.
Also big business builds near the water.
We have the worlds largest concentration on natural springs.
Our leaders and fake EPA allows Nestles a foreign owned company and American owned Coca Cola to sell this water to people all over the earth!!
Also, it supplies water to South Georgia, most of Florida. The springs are drying up and also saltwater coming in the river are flooding salt into the springs which are also a major attraction to visitors from all over the nation.
Also, some think this is Biblical.
America is flooded with the worlds migrants and nobody does anything to stop it. They all make promises but not a one has done anything to stop it.
 
15th post
This too is true,maily because most people illegally and legal who come to this USA like the climate and water.
Also big business builds near the water.
We have the worlds largest concentration on natural springs.
Our leaders and fake EPA allows Nestles a foreign owned company and American owned Coca Cola to sell this water to people all over the earth!!
Also, it supplies water to South Georgia, most of Florida. The springs are drying up and also saltwater coming in the river are flooding salt into the springs which are also a major attraction to visitors from all over the nation.
Also, some think this is Biblical.
America is flooded with the worlds migrants and nobody does anything to stop it. They all make promises but not a one has done anything to stop it.

Florida should implement liberal policies and raise taxes to pay for all the social programs ...
 
Another failed warmest/alarmist failure as the Hurricanes are poor this year and few tropical development, the water temperature isn't problem at all which more than warm enough.

==============

Irrational Fear

The Great Hurricane Drought of 2025

Exposing the Gap Between "Supercharged" Predictions and a Hurricane Season That Never Peaked​

Dr. Matthew Wielicki
Sep 16, 2025

Paid

Excerpt:

Free section (public)​

I’ve been monitoring the Colorado State University (CSU) real-time hurricane dashboard for weeks now: tropical.atmos.colostate.edu/Realtime/index.php?loc=northatlantic. Scroll down to the storm-by-storm table and the Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) plot; they tell a story that's far from the "supercharged" nightmare we've been sold.

Don't just take my word for it. Pull up the official 2025 storm list, then eye the ACE curve. ACE, accumulated cyclone energy, measures the total strength and duration of storms; it's like a season's energy scorecard. When no named storms form, the energy flatlines. On CSU's graph, you'll see that the stall is clear as day, especially through the peak around September 10th. The data? It's not matching the dire predictions.

Meanwhile, the media machine churns out alarmist headlines (while never mentioning the hurricane drought):

LINK
Hurricanes (or rarely any other form of really severe weather) are not a problem here on the high desert. But we are enjoying one of the coolest, most pleasant Septembers in anybody's recent memory.

I moved our cool to heat fall changeover moved up 10 days as the nights are going to get chilly here pretty soon. We're already down to the mid 50's at night now. And we're already having visible snow on our highest terrain. It's pretty hard to worry about global warming under such conditions.
 
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