1699 Atlantic Hurricane Season

The 1699 Atlantic Hurricane Season was an Above-average and 'catastrophic' season that would have set numerous records in Modern times, and likely would have cost over $300 to $500+ Billion USD in damages. The season overall would have never been able to have been predicted with our current technology, but this is a Hypothetical Analysis of the season.

(UNDER CONSTRUCTION)

Tropical Storm One
A Tropical disturbance-low formed off from the East of the Island of Cuba near modern-day Los Arroyos on March 5th, and after moving into the Southern Gulf of Mexico began tracking Northwestward towards the Florida Panhandle. The Storm eventually turned more Northwest at the last minute right before becoming a Tropical Storm and smashed into the armpit of Florida on 15:00 UTC March 9th, and then tracking outwards through Georgia and into the Atlantic Ocean again, before dissipating in the Mid-Atlantic on March 12th. It washed up parts of Modern-day Steinhatchee, which in 1699 was a tiny village called Borstur. An estimated 30+ people drowned and many others were also killed or lost.

Hurricane Two
A Rare, Complex and inconsistent Tropical-low disturbance formed off from the Eastern coast of Belize on May 22nd and began tracking Eastward-North Northeastward into the Central Carribean Sea on May 23rd the next day. On May 24th, the storm changed it's direction and began Churning North Northeastward towards Southern Cuba, becoming a Category 1 Hurricane on the 25th, and weakening before Strengthening once more into a Category 1 Hurricane with 1-minute maximum sustained winds of 85 miles per hour and gusts of 95 to 105 miles per hour in the early morning of May 26th. The Hurricane made landfall near Present-day Trinidad and stalled for 18 hours, before reversing its track and backing into the Coastal area of South Cuba on the evening of May 27th or early morning of the 28th. This allowed it to strengthen into a Category 2 and push itself back into the uninhabited area before eventually moving out of the region on May 30th after stalling for another day and eventually tracked into the Bahamas as a Tropical Storm, creating huge flooding in Prone areas of up to 10 feet. No Deaths were reported from this storm as it made landfall in uninhabited areas. The storm, after making landfall in and around the Bahamas, including Grand Bahama as an Unorganized Tropical System, finally began tracking into the Northern Atlantic Ocean and becoming Extratropical on June 2nd.