harold by them. in the south, temperatures rising even faster. 120 degrees in some parts of texas. now not just texas. get ready, this could get worse. welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. glad to have you. fox on top of more nature getting over the top. to rick reichmuth. what are we looking at, rick? not only is it abnormal to be the c-named storms, it s where they are that is abnormal. they ve been forming in the open atlantic. the waves that came off the coast of africa. that generally happens to mid september, we get into that type of tropical development. so getting there, we ve never had two that formed to the east of the lesser antilles. all forming in a time that we might be looking at a lower than average season. currently, we have bret, cindy. there s no real threat to land for this. we ve had some strong wind gusts. if you throw up weather max 16 behind me, i can show you what s going on here. wind gusts of 69 miles an hour in st. lucia. bret, down across parts
generally the first a name is june 20th. that is right about where we are now. august 3 is when we would normally see that. 98% still of our hurricane season is remaining. september 10, 11 is the peak. we have most of our hurricane activity then. we re looking at the eastern atlantic. 7 or 8 degrees a before where we would typically be. water doesn t heat up as fast as area. anywhere where you see yellow, those are water temperatures above average. in the pacific, this is el nino. when you have el nino, generally less activity in the atlantic because there s less hostile winds. we re in to el nino and likely to going to get in to a strong el nino. later on in the season, maybe that begins to have a bigger impact. because we ve seen these three storms doesn t mean that that