Skip Navigation Links weather.gov   
NOAA logo - Click to go to the NOAA homepage National Weather Service   NWS logo - Click to go to the NWS homepage
National Hurricane Center
Local forecast by
"City, St" or "ZIP"

 
Get Storm Info
   Satellite | Radar
   Aircraft Recon
   Advisory Archive
   Experimental
   Audio/Podcasts
   GIS Data
   About Advisories
Marine Forecasts
   Atlantic and E Pacific
   Analysis Tools
   Gridded Marine
   About Marine
Hurricane Awareness
   Preparedness
   Outreach Resources
   Storm Surge
   Frequent Questions
   Research
   Hurricane Hunters
   Saffir-Simpson Scale
   Forecast Models
   Glossary/Acronyms
   Storm Names
   Breakpoints
Hurricane History
   Seasons Archive
   Forecast Accuracy
   Climatology
   Most Extreme
Our Organization
   About NHC
   Mission | Staff
   Visitors | Virtual Tour
   Library Branch
   Joint Hurr Testbed
   NCEP | Newsletter
Contact Us
   Comments
Follow the National Hurricane Center on Facebook
Follow the National Hurricane Center on Twitter
 
FirstGov.gov is the U.S. Government's official Web portal to all Federal, state and local government Web resources and services.

Tropical Weather Summary



000
ABPZ30 KNHC 011442
TWSEP 
MONTHLY TROPICAL WEATHER SUMMARY
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL
800 AM PDT SAT JUL 01 2006

FOR THE EASTERN NORTH PACIFIC...EAST OF 140 DEGREES WEST LONGITUDE..

ONE TROPICAL CYCLONE...TROPICAL DEPRESSION TWO-E...FORMED DURING
JUNE 2006.  THE ABSENCE OF A NAMED STORM IN THE EASTERN NORTH
PACIFIC BASIN DURING JUNE IS AN INFREQUENT OCCURRENCE.  THE ONLY
OTHER YEAR SINCE 1971 DURING WHICH NO NAMED STORMS FORMED DURING
JUNE WAS 2004...AND THE AVERAGE NUMBER IS TWO.  ADDITIONALLY...THIS
IS THE SIXTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR WITHOUT A HURRICANE DURING JUNE IN
THE EASTERN NORTH PACIFIC...EVEN THOUGH THE LONG-TERM AVERAGE IS
ONE.

TROPICAL DEPRESSION TWO-E DEVELOPED FROM A TROPICAL WAVE ABOUT 140
MILES SOUTHWEST OF ZIHUATANEJO MEXICO ON 3 JUNE.  EVEN THOUGH THE
CYCLONE NEVER REACHED TROPICAL STORM STRENGTH...THE PROXIMITY TO
LAND AND THE UNCERTAINTY IN THE INTENSITY FORECAST PROMPTED THE
ISSUANCE OF TROPICAL STORM WARNINGS ALONG THE COAST OF MEXICO. THE
DEPRESSION SLOWLY MEANDERED OFF THE COAST OF MEXICO FOR A COUPLE OF
DAYS AND BROUGHT HEAVY RAINFALL...FLASH FLOODS...AND MUD SLIDES OVER
PORTIONS OF MEXICO. THE DEPRESSION DISSIPATED ON 5 JUNE AS IT
INTERACTED WITH LAND.

THE DAMAGE DUE TO HEAVY RAINFALL AND FLOODS HAS NOT YET BEEN
DETERMINED. 


SUMMARY TABLE

NAME           DATES           MAX WIND (KT)     DEATHS
-------------------------------------------------------
TD TWO-E       3-5 JUNE        30                0
-------------------------------------------------------
NOTE...DATES BASED ON COORDINATED UNIVERSAL TIME (UTC)


$$
FORECASTER MAINELLI/AVILA/KNABB/BLAKE



Quick Navigation Links:
NHC Active Storms  -  Atlantic and E Pacific Marine  -  Storm Archives
Hurricane Awareness  -  How to Prepare  -  About NHC  -  Contact Us

NOAA/ National Weather Service
National Centers for Environmental Prediction
National Hurricane Center
11691 SW 17th Street
Miami, Florida 33165-2149 USA
nhcwebmaster@noaa.gov
Disclaimer
Credits
Information Quality
Glossary
Privacy Policy
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
About Us
Career Opportunities
Page last modified: Tuesday, 01-Aug-2006 12:17:53 UTC