Teddy is presently passing about 150 miles off Bermuda now.
The forecast track:

Moderator: SoƱadora
BeauV wrote:What are y'all doing over there in that Atlantic Ocean?? Hurricanes all OVER the place!!! Geeesh!
Hurricane season, like many other aspects of life, has reached peak 2020.
When Tropical Storm Wilfred and Subtropical Storm Alpha formed on Friday, they became the 21st and 22nd named storms of the season. Not long after them, weather forecasters spotted Tropical Storm Beta.
Put another way, this marks just the second time in history that forecasters have had to resort to the Greek alphabet because available storm names have been exhausted.
The World Meteorological Organization has a list of 21 potential storm names, listed alphabetically from A to W (there are no Q, U, X, Y or Z names because of availability).
avramd wrote:Two weeks ago I believe we hit a record where for the first time in recorded history, there were five simultaneous tropical cyclones in the Atlantic. Three were TS's, one was and H and one was a "major hurricane." There were also two tropical depressions.
I have a theory/prediction that the ash clouds from the fires may actually be robbing the closer storms of the sun's energy, and that some of these would be even worse if not for them. Which is to say that I'm predicting that somebody with some actual credentials on this matter will produce this theory.
The measure of total seasonal activity used by NOAA is the Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) index. The ACE index is a wind energy index, defined as the sum of the squares of the maximum sustained surface wind speed (knots) measured every six hours for all named storms while they are at least tropical storm intensity.