Why are there two shades of green on the map but only one on the key?
TylerHyena on
Gotta appreciate the dedication to getting this chart done.
Narf234 on
Cool map but it doesn’t tell the whole story for the mid Atlantic. Hurricane Sandy (2012) was no longer tropical when it hit Brigantine, New Jersey. Anyone who lived through that can tell you the technical classification of the storm didn’t matter.
chartographics on
Those call-outs are colossally captivating!
ked_man on
It seems like they really like to aim for the coast.
SameNameAsBefore on
Edgar Cayce really knew what was up
USSMarauder on
That one spot in south Georgia
Frank_Melena on
SEC dominance once again
jabbs72 on
Not one on the Great Lakes, Midwest reigns supreme!
subliminalsnail on
TIL they used to name hurricanes One, Two, etc throughout the given year
SpursUpSoundsGudToMe on
You’re telling me they named a hurricane “Allen” and it went right for “McAllen” Texas?
CucumberWisdom on
Interesting how hurricanes seem to have stopped making landfall so far north over the decades. Only Gloria and Bob have hit the north since the 80s
np8790 on
The “return period” criterion is bizarre. The counties on the Gulf north of Tampa are in the 5-7 years range on the legend, I guess because they had one 5-7 years apart 60 years ago?
nborders on
We got the idea. So now let’s be done with NOAA. 🙄
FavoriteApe on
If only the liberals complaining about gas prices had bought an EV and fired their illegal alien yard workers using gas leaf blowers.
Zealousideal_Dish919 on
How is it possible for a hurricane to make landfall in south west Connecticut?
I cannot imagine a scenario where the hurricane heads down all the way Long Island Sound before heading north towards Connecticut. Especially when the hurricane is most likely many times larger than Long Island Sound.
Kdubs3235 on
I guess the only safe place to live on the East Coast is the DelMarVa area.
yellow_banditos on
Miami-Dade County Should be Green, the last Hurricane was 1992. Patterns have greatly shifted.
Epicapabilities on
Interesting how the Outer Banks provide a „shield“ of sorts protecting Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware from landfalls, since almost all hurricanes are travelling north by the time they reach the Mid-Atlantic
PaulOshanter on
Interesting to see that Florida doesn’t really stand out all the much compared to the rest of the Gulf and Southeast coast.
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20 Kommentare
Why are there two shades of green on the map but only one on the key?
Gotta appreciate the dedication to getting this chart done.
Cool map but it doesn’t tell the whole story for the mid Atlantic. Hurricane Sandy (2012) was no longer tropical when it hit Brigantine, New Jersey. Anyone who lived through that can tell you the technical classification of the storm didn’t matter.
Those call-outs are colossally captivating!
It seems like they really like to aim for the coast.
Edgar Cayce really knew what was up
That one spot in south Georgia
SEC dominance once again
Not one on the Great Lakes, Midwest reigns supreme!
TIL they used to name hurricanes One, Two, etc throughout the given year
You’re telling me they named a hurricane “Allen” and it went right for “McAllen” Texas?
Interesting how hurricanes seem to have stopped making landfall so far north over the decades. Only Gloria and Bob have hit the north since the 80s
The “return period” criterion is bizarre. The counties on the Gulf north of Tampa are in the 5-7 years range on the legend, I guess because they had one 5-7 years apart 60 years ago?
We got the idea. So now let’s be done with NOAA. 🙄
If only the liberals complaining about gas prices had bought an EV and fired their illegal alien yard workers using gas leaf blowers.
How is it possible for a hurricane to make landfall in south west Connecticut?
I cannot imagine a scenario where the hurricane heads down all the way Long Island Sound before heading north towards Connecticut. Especially when the hurricane is most likely many times larger than Long Island Sound.
I guess the only safe place to live on the East Coast is the DelMarVa area.
Miami-Dade County Should be Green, the last Hurricane was 1992. Patterns have greatly shifted.
Interesting how the Outer Banks provide a „shield“ of sorts protecting Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware from landfalls, since almost all hurricanes are travelling north by the time they reach the Mid-Atlantic
Interesting to see that Florida doesn’t really stand out all the much compared to the rest of the Gulf and Southeast coast.