John?, Who's John?

Here’s a list from the National Hurricane Center, with the names of possible hurricanes in 2006.
We are dealing with ERNESTO right now, and I am reading that JOHN is now hitting Mexico.
What happened to F, G, H and I?
Why isn’t JOHN even listed?

2006
Alberto
Beryl
Chris
Debby
Ernesto
Florence
Gordon
Helene
Isaac
Joyce
Kirk
Leslie
Michael
Nadine
Oscar
Patty
Rafael
Sandy
Tony
Valerie
William
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/aboutnames.shtml

The Pacific has a different list.

Those are the Atlantic names. John is in the Pacific. Here are the names for the Pacific.

Aletta
Bud
Carlotta
Daniel
Emilia
Fabio
Gilma
Hector
Ileana
John
Kristy
Lane
Miriam
Norman
Olivia
Paul
Rosa
Sergio
Tara
Vicente
Willa
Xavier
Yolanda
Zeke

cite.

Correctomundo, guys. My mistake. :smack:

So if John crosses Mexico and ends up in the Gulf, will he have a sex-change operation and become Joyce?! :smiley:

Do storms every cross Mexico or Central America?

I think it happened last year. I’ll try to find a cite.

I was just joking about the sex change, but they do cross (both ways) AND change names when they do:

Occasionally, an Atlantic tropical storm crosses Mexico or Central America and enters the eastern Pacific. Most lose their hurricane punch crossing the landmass and peter out in the Pacific. However, a few weakened storms re-energize over the Pacific and again reach tropical storm or hurricane status. If they do, they are assigned the next name on the list of Eastern Pacific storms. Rarely does a storm go the opposite way, but there have been instances where this has occurred. The last to do so was Hurricane Cosme which left the Eastern Pacific to become Atlantic Tropical Storm Allison in 1989. Interestingly, one 1961 hurricane immigrated from the Atlantic, regained hurricane status on the Pacific side, then decided to return to the Atlantic. The story of “the hurricane with three names” can be found elsewhere on this site.

From “The Weather Almanac.”

Pacific hurricane Adrian (2005) almost made it into the gulf, but not quite.

Storms that have crossed from the Atlantic to the Pacific or the Pacific to the Atlantic, best records since the mid-1960s:
Atlantic Hurricane Cesar (July 1996) became Northeast Pacific Hurricane Douglas.
Atlantic Tropical Storm Bret (August 1993) became Hurricane Greg in the Northeast Pacific.
Northeast Pacific Hurricane Cosme became Atlantic Tropical Storm Allison (June 1989).
Atlantic Hurricane Joan (October 1988) became Northeast Pacific Hurricane Miriam.
Atlantic Hurricane Greta (September 1978) became Northeast Pacific Hurricane Olivia.
Atlantic Hurricane Fifi (September 1974) became Northeast Pacific Tropical Storm Orlene.
Atlantic Hurricane Irene (September 1971) became Northeast Pacific Tropical Storm Olivia.
Atlantic Hurricane Hattie (October-November 1961) became Northeast Pacific Tropical Storm Simone.
A Northeast Pacific Tropical Storm (September-October 1949) became an Atlantic Hurricane (Storm #10) and made landfall in TX.

kristy is hanging out a bit further west than john. john is packing quite a punch and is doing some sightseeing in rather ritzy areas of mexico.

there is a typhoon near asia, and of course ernesto on the east coast. a rather busy week or 2 for storm chasers.

That’s just for the Eastern Pacific.

Central Pacific cyclones use a different set
Currently:
Alika
Ele
Huko
Ioke
Kika
Lana
Maka
Neki
Oleka
Peni
Ulia
Wal

Ioke is the storm that’s forced evacuation of Wake Island this week

I need to show these lists to seven year-old Kizarvexilla. Her real name is Katrina, and she still gets mad at the weather bureau for having associated her lovely and somewhat unusual name with the greatest natural disaster in American history. The phrase “Katrina victims” sends her into fits of wrath and despair. Apparently, some of the kids in her class also tease her now. Maybe some of their names will be on the new hurricane lists??

I am waiting for someone at the hurricane center to slip Mulva in as a name.

John had nowhere near the devastion that was hyped in the media. In fact I don’t think it caused much harm at all. Baja may still get hit but the storm is down to a category 2.

I was hoping for a huge swell for surfing and John couldn’t even accomplish that. Some very light wind and a few centimeters of rain was all we got in southern JAlisco.