2017 Pacific Hurricane Season (Official Prediction- Nkechinyer)

Overview
The 2017 Pacific Hurricane Season was a event in which tropical cyclones formed in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean, north of the equator and east of 180 degrees longitude. The season was expected to be near average at the beginning, but quickly faded off into one of the worst seasons of all time in the Eastern Pacific, featuring a near-record low number of depressions, the season had some strong storms and even saw the retirement of Two Names.

Pre-Season
The Season got off to a extremely unusual start 4 days into the month of January when unusual, wrong way Typhoon Muifa found it's way into the Central Pacific and dissipated to the Southwest of Hawaii.

Tropical Storm Muifa
On January 1st, a tropical depression developed in the West Pacific. Under surprisingly favorable conditions for the time of year, the system became Tropical storm Muifa. Moving Easterly, another extremely unusual event, it continued to strengthen, eventually becoming Typhoon Muifa. Muifa continued moving east. At around 175 east, it began to encounter the cooler CPAC waters and quickly fell back from 85 to 75 mph. Muifa entered the Central Pacific on January 4th, as a 70 mph Tropical Storm. Under cooler waters, Muifa continued to weaken rapidly, dissipating 3 days later on January 7th- while well southwest of Honolulu, Hawaii.