Skip to content
DAMWeather DAMWeather DAMWeather

The weather can get scary. Reporting on it doesn't have to be.

DAMWeather DAMWeather DAMWeather

The weather can get scary. Reporting on it doesn't have to be.

  • About Me
  • All Bylines
    • Books, Bylines, and Press
    • The Skies Above (Book)
    • Extreme Weather (Book)
    • The Weather Network
    • The Vane
    • Forbes
    • Capital Weather Gang
    • Mental Floss
  • Maps
    • Hurricane Maps
    • Hurricane Names
    • Monthly Tornadoes
    • Tornado Tracks
    • F5/EF-5 Tornadoes
    • SPC High Risk Days
  • GIS Resources
  • Contact Me
    • Bluesky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
  • wxdam.com
  • About Me
  • All Bylines
    • Books, Bylines, and Press
    • The Skies Above (Book)
    • Extreme Weather (Book)
    • The Weather Network
    • The Vane
    • Forbes
    • Capital Weather Gang
    • Mental Floss
  • Maps
    • Hurricane Maps
    • Hurricane Names
    • Monthly Tornadoes
    • Tornado Tracks
    • F5/EF-5 Tornadoes
    • SPC High Risk Days
  • GIS Resources
  • Contact Me
    • Bluesky
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
  • wxdam.com
Close

Search

A cute li’l tropical storm in the Gulf kicks off the 2023 hurricane season

By Dennis Mersereau
June 2, 2023 2 Min Read

The first named storm of the 2023 Atlantic hurricane season formed on Friday afternoon. 
Tropical Storm Arlene is a disheveled little thing spinning about a hundred miles off the western coast of Florida. It’s not long for this world, thankfully, and it should dissipate near the tip of Cuba this weekend without much fanfare.
Arlene developed in the way most early-season storms do—a cold front stalled out over the northern Gulf of Mexico, giving rise to a low-pressure system that slowly gathered tropical characteristics.
An aircraft investigating the disturbance on Thursday discovered the system had organized into a tropical depression just about 18 hours into the first day of hurricane season. Another aircraft found it had strengthened just enough to warrant tropical storm status by Friday afternoon.

This is…not a healthy system. It’s lopsided as a result of wind shear and dry air, essentially a cluster of persistent thunderstorms feeding off a tight, exposed swirl drifting over the open waters. It’s a cute li’l thing to be sure, and it’s exactly what you’d expect to see this early in the season.
The National Hurricane Center expects Arlene to steadily weaken into this weekend before dissipating off the tip of Cuba by Sunday.
Despite earning the first name on this hurricane season’s list, this actually isn’t the first storm of the year. That dubious distinction goes to an unnamed system that formed in the middle of January, believe it or not, about halfway between Bermuda and Nova Scotia.

While this system was a full-blown subtropical storm in the dead of winter, but the National Hurricane Center opted not to name it or issue any advisories at the time. Forecasters declared it a subtropical storm in hindsight in May, making it the year’s first storm and one that’ll forever live in the records as “Unnamed.” (I wrote more about this unnamed storm for The Weather Network last month.)
That mid-January storm made this the eighth hurricane season in the past nine years to start before the ‘official’ kickoff of hurricane season on June 1st. Last year, the NHC began issuing its twice-daily outlooks on May 15 in response to this widening window. 
[top satellite image via NOAA]


You can follow me on Facebook, Mastodon, Twitter, Instagram, or send me an email.

Please consider subscribing to my Patreon. Your support helps me write engaging, hype-free weather coverage—no fretting over ad revenue, no chasing viral clicks. Just the weather.

  

Author

Dennis Mersereau

I have 15+ of experience providing hype-free weather information for folks across the United States and around the world. In addition to DAMWeather, I also contribute to The Weather Network as a digital writer and weather specialist.

Follow Me
Other Articles
Previous

May ends on an odd note with 90s in Canada and 60s in the Carolinas

Next

Baseball size hail and 80+ mph winds likely on the southern Plains Thursday


Local ◈ UTC
Facebook | Bluesky
Instagram | Threads | Email
DAMWeather is now ad-free! Everyone benefits from engaging, hype-free weather coverage. Please consider supporting my efforts through Patreon:




Order The Skies Above today!

Bookshop.org || Barnes & Noble
Mountaineers Books || Amazon

My latest book, The Skies Above, is now available!

Did you know a puffy cloud can weigh millions of pounds? Or that every rainbow you see is unique to you?

Our atmosphere is full of spectacular sights that are always within your reach. Glistening layers of fog, gorgeous sunsets, and brilliant meteors flashing through the sky can light up even the calmest day.

The Skies Above, published by Mountaineers Books, is a celebration of what we overlook when we look up. I was thrilled to work with the editors and illustrators at Indelible Editions to share with you the quotidian beauty of our sky.

Order your copy now and learn about the wonders we take for granted every day.

I teamed up with the editors of Outdoor Life magazine to write The Extreme Weather Survival Manual, your guide to surviving and thriving in almost any weather condition. Whether you're an avid outdoorsperson or you enjoy watching the radar from the comfort of your home, you're sure to find helpful tips, advice, and new bits of knowledge in this fascinating book.

You can buy my book today through Amazon.
  • 2026 (34)
  • 2025 (49)
  • 2024 (59)
  • 2023 (43)
  • 2022 (57)
  • 2021 (71)
  • 2020 (83)
  • 2019 (88)
  • 2018 (92)
  • 2017 (1)
  • 2016 (4)
  • 2015 (10)

Copyright 2026 — DAMWeather. All rights reserved. Blogsy WordPress Theme