Haptinian Hurricane Centre

The Haptinian Hurricane Centre (HHC) is a Hurricane Centre/Center that was founded in 1909, and forecasts mostly in the Haptinian Basin. Other areas it forecasts are: Danuelan Basin, DATL, LPAC, and more.

History
On August 12th, 1909 ahead of the 1909 Haptinian Hurricane Season, the HHC was founded, by Marcus Griffis (1888-1952) and his wife, Sarah Griffis (1892-1950), two well known haptinian meteorologists. On September 12th, 1909 the first Haptinian Satellite was launched into space, as Haptinia is a lot more advanced than earth. Then on September 24th, 1909 the first advisory was done on a storm, called One, which eventually became a Category 2 Hurricane, and made landfall in Mohoma Island. On March 11th, 1915 the first couple of other meteorologists where hired, known as Paul Smith (1895-1963) and Matthew Johnson (1892-1947). These two would eventually go on to be the advisory poster (Paul Smith), and the satellite observer (Matthew Johnson). On December 12th, 1930, the original owner, Marcus Griffis retired, soon followed by Sarah Griffis on May 6th, 1931 and the Ownership was passed on to their son, Fred Griffis (1920-1974), on May 7th, 1931. On May 12th, 1931, only 5 days after Fred Griffis became owner of the agency, the HHC made their first Category 5 advisory, on Hurricane Twelve, this was their first tracked category 5, which became 175mph, 905mbar, but on May 12th, 1950, 19 years later, a reanalysis on Hurricane Five in the 1909 season, making it 160mph, 920mbar, proved that this wasn't correct

After 1950, the Haptinian Basin managed to make the first hyperactive season since the 1922 season, ending a long drought of inactivity in the basin, with 1950 having 25 tropical storms, 15 Hurricanes, and 7 Majors, including 2 category 5s, and eventually to 3 C5s, after the 2000 reanalysis.

Much Later on August 12th, 2009, the HHC celebrated 100 years of tracking storms, and produced new graphics and yet another reanalysis of storms, which famously put Floyd of 2000 at 200mph, making it the 6th 200mph+ storm in the basin ever.

On September 12th, 2015, a reanalysis of 2009's Emily putting it from 175mph-165mph, received backlash, and the bad reanalysis led to a short shut down of the HHC from September 20th-28th, but it went back up on September 29th, as they put it back to 175mph.