HURRICANE CENTER
HURRICANE CENTER: The people, science and decisions that protect communities before, during and after the storm.
HURRICANE CENTER
S8: Episode 139 Early Season Storms: Signal or Noise?
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Early tropical activity can create a lot of noise. A June storm near land may grab headlines, raise anxiety and spark big seasonal questions: Is this a sign of an active year? Does an early storm mean the season is ahead of schedule? Or is it just one weather event in a much larger climate pattern?
On this episode of HurricaneCenter, Michael Lowry joins the program to help answer those questions. Lowry brings a rare combination of tropical forecasting, storm surge, broadcast and emergency management experience. He currently serves as Hurricane Specialist and Storm Surge Expert at WPLG-TV Miami, and his background includes work with the National Hurricane Center, The Weather Channel, FEMA and emergency management.
The conversation centers on the difference between short-term tropical weather and longer-season signals. Early storms can be important, especially when they produce flooding, coastal water issues, gusty winds or public confusion. But they do not always say much about what the peak of the season will bring. Lowry helps frame what forecasters look for instead: large-scale steering patterns, ocean heat, vertical wind shear, moisture, pressure patterns and where storms are forming.
The episode also explores communication. Early-season systems can be messy, sheared, lopsided or close to land. Those storms may not look impressive on satellite, but they can still produce meaningful local impacts. That is where clear messaging matters: rainfall, storm surge, coastal flooding and power interruptions can occur even when a storm is not a classic major hurricane.
This is a useful episode for weather professionals, emergency managers, coastal residents and anyone trying to understand how to read the tropics without overreacting to every early-season development.
Key Takeaways
- Early storms do not automatically define the rest of hurricane season.
- A named storm can be impactful even if it is weak, sheared or poorly organized.
- The best seasonal clues often come from large-scale patterns, not a single storm.
- Storm surge and rainfall risk can be more important than category or appearance.
- Communication matters most when the atmosphere produces messy, borderline systems.
- The public should prepare for the season as a whole, not just react to the first storm.
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