The 2018 Central
Pacific hurricane season will end Friday much like it started — with a couple of months of smooth sailing and no tropical
cyclones on the horizon.
It was the middle part that got rather dicey.
The Central Pacific experienced six powerful tropical cyclones over a two-month period from August to the
beginning of October, making it one of the most active seasons on record for the ocean basin between 140 and
180 degrees west.
During a five-week stretch, the islands seemed to be under constant threat from hurricanes rolling in from the Eastern Pacific.
One of them was a Category 5 monster known as Hurricane Lane, the scariest hurricane facing Honolulu in decades. But after dumping more than 4 feet of rain
on the east side of Hawaii
island, the storm slowed, weakened and largely bypassed Oahu.
A few weeks later, Olivia entered the Central Pacific as a Category 1 hurricane before making landfall on Maui and Lanai as a tropical storm, the first tropical
cyclone to hit those islands in the modern era.
All six of the Central
Pacific cyclones this season reached hurricane strength, the second most since reliable record keeping began in 1971. Four of the cyclones were major hurricanes with sustained winds exceeding 120 mph. Two of those reached Category 5 strength, with sustained winds of 160 mph.
Only the strong El Nino year of 2015 saw more hurricanes in the Central Pacific — eight of the season’s
15 cyclones, including tropical storms and tropical
depressions.
It was that same year that saw a record-setting season for accumulated cyclone
energy, a measurement of
cyclone activity used by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The total ACE, as it is called, reached 115 — a number that was matched this season.
Hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University said this year’s Central Pacific hurricane season was generally characterized by below-normal wind shear and above-
normal sea surface temperatures, conditions that allow for an active season.
“It was one of the most
active seasons on record for that part of the (Pacific)
basin,” Klotzbach said.
The action began in early August when Category 4 Hurricane Hector churned by the islands a couple hundred miles south of Hawaii island.
Next came Lane on a similar path, only farther south. Instead of moving past the islands like Hector, Lane turned north in a move reminiscent of 1992’s Hurricane Iniki, which slammed into Kauai.
Lane reached its peak
intensity of 160 mph on
Aug. 21, when it was due south of the Big Island and its National Weather Service cone of uncertainty fully
encompassed Oahu.
State and local officials in Honolulu urged the public to undertake hurricane preparations like never before, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency even held a news conference in Washington, D.C., to describe its plan for Hawaii
disaster support.
The storm traveled up the island chain and slowed to a crawl, spinning off strong winds and heavy rain. Hilo endured major flooding, and rain gauges in Mountain View recorded 51.53 inches, the third-highest U.S. rainfall total from a tropical cyclone since 1950, according to a National Weather Service preliminary report.
As Lane continued to creep closer to Oahu, high-level wind shear chipped away at the storm, and it withered from Category 4 to Category 1 in about a day’s time.
“It was pretty impressive that it weakened that quickly,” National Weather Service meteorologist Matt Foster said.
Lane was still a Category 1 hurricane at its closest point to Honolulu (110 miles)
before lower-level winds pushed it west and away from the islands.
But not before strong gusts fueled a brush fire on Maui, destroying 22 homes near Lahaina. Lingering rain bands from Lane also pounded Kauai, leading to the death of a 30-year-old man who jumped into a swollen stream to save a dog.
Lane was only the second Category 5 hurricane to pass within 250 miles of
Hawaii, with the last being Hurricane John in 1994,
according to NOAA.
Formerly a major hurricane, Olivia came onshore Sept. 12 as a 45-mph tropical storm just north of rural
Kahakuloa on Maui’s windward coast. Forty-four minutes later, the storm made
a second landfall on the northeast coast of Lanai about 6 miles north-
northeast of Lanai City.
Heavy rain led to rising waters and evacuations of homes on both sides of the West Maui Mountains, and all of the islands experienced destructive wind gusts and rain, leading to dozens of power outages, uprooted trees, closed roads, mudslides, rockfalls and raging streams.
Hurricane Walaka, which formed in the Central Pacific on Sept. 29, more than
1,000 miles south of the
islands, grew into a Category 5 storm with 160 mph sustained winds. But its path took it well to the
west of the main Hawaiian
islands. It did threaten Johnston Atoll, prompting the evacuation of a team of scientists working there.
Walaka would be the season’s last hurrah despite warnings about a developing El Nino weather pattern and potential for more
cyclone development.