02 April 2019

2019 Hurricane Season Intro: Local Edition

Five-day forecast of hurricane wind speed probabilities for Hurricane Irma (2017). (NHC)

Hurricane Basics


Hurricanes are large low pressure systems that generally require warm tropical water to form and strengthen.  They come in a range of sizes, but are classified by their wind speed. Since the early 1970s, the Saffir-Simpson Scale has been used to rate hurricanes by the peak sustained wind speed found somewhere in the storm.

Before becoming a hurricane, there are two stages. When a cluster of thunderstorms becomes persistent and organized enough to have a "closed" circulation in the surface wind, it is designated a tropical depression and given a number.  While these can produce tremendous amounts of rain, they are quite weak in terms of wind speed.  If the sustained winds reach 40 mph, it is upgraded to a tropical storm and given a name. Tropical storms also have the potential for heavy rain, but winds are now strong enough to do serious damage to vegetation (and falling trees or tree limbs can take out power lines and roofs/buildings).  It is unsafe to be outdoors during tropical storm force winds.

If a tropical storm continues to strengthen and sustained winds reach 74 mph, it is upgraded to a hurricane.  From there, the stronger it gets, the higher the category rating it gets.  The scale tops out at Category 5 (157+ mph) because at that point, catastrophic failure of structures and trees has already happened.  Only 2% of named storms in the Atlantic ever reach Category 5 intensity. The most intense Atlantic hurricane on record is Allen in 1980 with 190 mph sustained winds, and the most intense landfalling hurricane in the United States was the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane with 185 mph sustained winds.


The term "major hurricane" refers to any hurricane that is Category 3 or higher on this scale.  It has nothing to do with impacts, damage, or fatalities it may cause. A hurricane of any category can be destructive and deadly.

To illustrate the point about size, the satellite images below show two major hurricanes in the eastern Gulf of Mexico at approximately the same scale and intensity: Charley (2004, left) and Rita (2005, right). While the peak wind speed was roughly the same, the larger a storm is, the more areas and people it will impact if it hits land.


In terms of structure, a well-organized hurricane is characterized by a calm, clear central eye which is surrounded by a thin ring of intense wind called the eyewall. The eyewall is the "business end" of the beast, and contains the highest wind speed on which the category rating is based.  Wind speeds drop noticeably outside of the eyewall, but rainbands spiral outward from there for hundreds of miles and contain violent winds and tornado-producing thunderstorms.  Impacts such as storm surge, tornadoes, and flash flooding can all extend hundreds of miles from the center of the storm.

Radar image of Hurricane Irma (2017).  Although radar images depict rainfall intensity, it correlates well with wind intensity too in many cases. The eye is the central "hole", the intense eyewall is the red-orange ring surrounding the eye, and some rainbands can be seen spiraling out from the eyewall.

Seasonal Climatology


The official Atlantic hurricane season spans June 1 through November 30, and by design, the vast majority of activity is typically confined to those dates (not necessarily all of it).  Within the season, about 85% of the activity normally falls within the core months of August, September, and October.


Although the climatological peak of the season is in early-mid September, the month with the most hurricane impacts in south Florida is October.  June, July, and November have typically been relatively quiet here, while August and September are when the strongest storms have hit.  Also notice that about half of the storms that impact us come from the east (generally Jun-Sep) and half come from the west (generally Oct-Nov).  Hurricanes are big, so we can experience significant impacts even without a direct landfall.

Tracks of hurricanes from 1851-2017 that passed within 100 miles of Miami, grouped into each month of hurricane season.
Miami-Dade County has only been affected five times in the past fifty years, including one major hurricane.  Compare that to the previous fifty years, when the county was hit seventeen times, eleven of which were major hurricanes!  The chart below shows a timeline of hurricane impacts in the county with major hurricanes marked in red, and overlaid in the orange line is the county's blossoming population.

Although 2017's Hurricane Irma counts because it produced hurricane-force winds in far western parts of the county, the metropolitan eastern parts of the county experienced "only" tropical storm conditions.

There is no law of nature that says we cannot get hit twice in the same season... it has happened six times since records began in 1851. In 1948, we actually got hit twice within two weeks. Then more recently in 2005, Katrina and Wilma produced hurricane conditions in the county two months apart. Though rare, it doesn't hurt to be aware of the possibility.


Property Preparation


As we saw in the abnormally lengthy span between Wilma and Irma, an extended break allowed a messy situation to arise: twelve years of untested tree growth. The prolonged tropical storm force winds associated with Irma were good at finding weak, rotten, top-heavy, or diseased trees and breaking or uprooting them. If another Irma were to occur this year, the debris piles would be noticeably smaller.  But if something stronger comes along (a hurricane of any category), branches and trees that withstood Irma could go.


This is the perfect time to look around your property to see what you can do to minimize damage long before a storm threatens.  That includes random unused outdoor items, and especially trees.  Having your trees properly pruned, thinned, and/or topped (or removed if they're dead or rotten) now can save you and your neighbors damage and power loss during a storm.  If the tree is growing into or over power lines, it's best to report it to FPL and they'll take care of it -- it saves them time to do preventative work rather than repair work.  (If you have a mango, avocado or other tree with fruit on it now, it's best to wait until after fruiting season to trim it.)

Online:
https://app.fpl.com/serviceQuality/SQController?command=welcome&ticketType=TW&requestNumber=0749
Phone:
305-442-8770

If you have a generator, try it out before the start of each hurricane season just to be sure it works. If you have shutters for your windows and doors, make sure they are all accounted for and in good working order.  These would be issues you don't want to discover two days before a hurricane landfall.

Review your insurance policies and coverage (auto, home, windstorm, flood, renters), and make sure you know a number to call after a storm if you need to file a claim.  Keep important documents (including insurance policies) in a safe and dry place or bring them with you if you leave.  A quick call to your agent is easy and can give you peace of mind that you have the coverage you thought you had.  Having a photo/video inventory of your possessions is also a good idea.


Evacuation Zone and Plan


In the event of an intense hurricane approaching, storm surge increasingly becomes a concern.  Storm surge is the rise of water levels due to strong onshore winds "bulldozing" the ocean onto land, and is the #1 killer during hurricanes in the U.S. by far.  Storm surge also does not correlate perfectly with a storm's category rating... it  depends on the size of the storm, forward speed of the storm, coastal topography, offshore bathymetry, and more.  A large slow-moving Category 1 hurricane could generate a larger storm surge than a small Category 3 hurricane, for example.  Remember: "There's more to the story than the category!"


In Miami-Dade County, evacuation zones are defined primarily by storm surge risk (not wind risk), and the zones are not limited to the immediate coast.  The surge of water can travel up canals and rivers.  The zones are crude in shape, and the entire county would never experience the peak surge or evacuation orders.  But knowing your zone letter gives you a general sense of your potential risk from storm surge and evacuation priority... here is a map centered on the northeast portion of the county:


and here is the interactive website if you want to peruse more on your own:
https://mdc.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=4919c85a439f40c68d7b3c81c3f44b58
In Broward County, a two-tier evacuation zone system is used and the map is available at http://www.broward.org/Hurricane/Documents/EvacuationMapADACompliant.pdf

If you decide to evacuate, it is a good idea to have a place and plan in mind before the stress of an approaching storm sets in.  Secure your house, shut off all power/gas, bring valuables and important documents with you, and always let friends and neighbors know where you're going and how to contact you.

If you decide to stay and shelter in place, be prepared to be self-sufficient for at least three days, longer if possible. This means enough food, clean water, and medication for every person and pet in the house. Also expect to be without electricity for an extended time (possibly over a week), as well as internet access and even phone service. Communication will likely be a challenge in the immediate aftermath. If you have a portable generator, don't forget to stock up on gas for it.  Spare batteries and basic first aid supplies should also be part of your standard hurricane season checklist.

Hoping for a safe season,
Brian