I'm really puzzled with what happened here: Tropical Depression #16 was upgraded to Tropical Storm Nicole earlier today at 11 AM EDT with winds of 40 mph. Nicole was over Cuba during the upgrade as the center had relocated over land. After it emerged into open waters north of Cuba, the center of circulation became elongated and untrackable as it approached the frontal zone off the East Coast. NHC has issued the last advisory for Nicole at 5 PM EDT. It really makes me wonder if this system should have ever been declared anything in the first place.
Certainly. Why would the National Hurricane Center ignore a storm based on the length it was active, which, by the way, is impossible to accurately predict ahead of time?
The storm
did make landfall (as a tropical depression) in Cuba, and its effects were felt throughout Florida, the Bahamas, and elsewhere. The fact that the storm didn't complete a month-long marathon trek across the Atlantic doesn't mean it should have been paid any less attention.