It's difficult to keep up! As a measure of just how active the present season is
With the Atlantic hurricane season just two days past the climatological half-way point, we’ve already had 18 named storms, five hurricanes, and one intense hurricane. Only seven Atlantic hurricane seasons since 1851 have had more named storms during an entire season. According to Colorado State University hurricane scientist Phil Klotzbach, the averages for this point in the season are seven named storms, three hurricanes, and one intense hurricane.
https://yaleclimateconnections.org/2020/09/sally-could-hit-between-new-orleans-and-mobile-at-hurricane-strength/
For a run-through
Paulette is expected to do a sharp recurve over Bermuda and head towards the UK. At this time yesterday it was forecast to head for Greenland but the latest GFS shows it dying in mid-Atlantic - but Thomas Schafferwahtsit on BBC last night was raising the possibility of it getting close to the UK
Rene is dying in mid Atlantic despite early promise of development
Sally has developed out of TD18 (see above post and the link I've given). Some forecast put it at cat 3(none less than cat 1; can't think why the models were so reluctant to predict a hurricane until yesterday) and uncomfortably close to New Orleans; may just landfall a little more east. The link above predicts very heavy rainfall along the Gulf Coast as Sally is si slow-moving.
TD20 is an upgrade of the disturbance off Africa. NHC has it developing as a hurricane quite quickly (that would be three simultaneous Atlantic hurricanes) but running NW into open seas; at one stage it was thought to be likely to menace the Caribbean on a southern track
There are also two more disturbances, one off Africa behind TD20 which NHC thinks will develop (60% in the next five days) and one in the Gulf of Mexico (NHC doesn't rate this though the link above is more wary)
War does not determine who is right, only who is left - Bertrand Russell
Chichester 12m asl