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The tropical Atlantic is staying busy with Teddy and the next system in the Gulf
01:30 - Source: CNN
CNN  — 

There really is no rest for the weary.

Nearly the entire US East Coast from Brownsville, Texas, to Portland, Maine, have experienced tropical storm-force winds this hurricane season. And only small portions of Florida, Georgia and Maine’s coastline have escaped winds of that intensity this year.

Now, another storm is forming and the hardest-hit areas along the Gulf Coast need to keep an eye on it.

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Get the latest on all the tropical systems >>>

Wilfred, the last name on this season’s list, has about a 90% chance of forming in the Gulf of Mexico, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Tropical Depression Twenty-Two has formed over the southwestern Gulf of Mexico, according to data from a Hurricane Hunter plane flying through the system. Maximum sustained winds are 35 mph, and the depression will likely become a tropical storm Friday, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Wilfred is the next name on the Atlantic list, and the last name before the NHC is forced to switch to the Greek alphabet for future storms. The system is not an immediate threat to land, and is forecast to drift slowly north over the weekend. It’s still to early too know where, or what impacts the storm will have on the US Gulf Coast.

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Computer forecast models are all over the place on where this will go once it forms. Some take it west into Mexico, some bring it into Texas, and others anywhere from Louisiana to Alabama.

“The hurricane models all have a difficult time with disorganized systems,” CNN meteorologist Chad Myers said. “Once the hurricane hunter airplane finds a true center and pressure, then the models will have a forecast we can trust.”

So, by Friday, there should be a better sense of where this system will move. Either way – everyone along the western Gulf Coast will need to keep an eye on it going into next week.

Hurricane Teddy could strike Bermuda, then Canada

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Teddy seems to be harmless, spinning out in the middle of the Atlantic. But it could make a run at Bermuda, which was just directly hit by Hurricane Paulette earlier this week.

The storm is the 4th this year to rapidly intensify in the Atlantic, and is now the 2nd major hurricane of the year. It has wind speeds of 120 mph with stronger gusts, as of the 11 a.m. update from the NHC.

If it makes landfall in Bermuda, it would only be the second time in history this has happened twice in the same year.

In 2014, Gonzalo struck Bermuda less than a week after Hurricane Fay struck the island.

As of 11 a.m. on Thursday, the National Hurricane Center has Bermuda within the forecast cone, meaning it is plausible it could happen.

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The good news is the forecast computer models have backed off a little bit and show Teddy moving north of the island.

But they do show Teddy reaching North America and impacting eastern Canada next week. Possibly even Maine.

Thankfully, Vicky looks like it will be no harm to land. It is expected to weaken further today and dissipate in the next couple of days.

The 2020 historic hurricane season continues to produce storm after storm

“The 2020 season has been remarkable. Every tropical wave or disturbance seems to be developing into a named storm,” CNN meteorologist Taylor Ward says. “This stretch of hyperactivity is extremely rare.”

Typically, you will see tropical waves coming off Africa and only a few would form. But this year, it seems conditions have been just right. This is why, the past week, we have consistently seen anywhere from 3 to 5 systems at one time across the Atlantic.

It is also why we are at the end of the 2020 hurricane season name list and will have to move to naming storms by the Greek alphabet after Wilfred. This has only happened once before, in 2005.

Wilfred, once named, will become the earliest named “21st” storm ever in the Atlantic.

The 21st named storm has never occurred in the month of September. The earliest was Vince in 2005, which occurred on October 8th.

With more possible storms forming across the Atlantic, it is likely to see Alpha by the end of the week and, if not, next week. Making this indeed a historic hurricane season that still has over two months left.