Well, sort of.
Currently, there is a tropical system off the coast of El Salvador which is expected to cross the Central American isthmus.
Eventually it will enter the warm waters of the Caribbean and voila, as of now, the trajectory puts it through the windward channel (ie. Between Cuba and Haiti).
Not only is this an extremely early storm, but its moving in an odd direction (west to east) compared to most other storms, but this is reality as of now.
Since trajectories of these storms change with the whims of winds that guide them, it would be wise to keep an eye on this, at least until Hispaniola is cleared.
Currently, there is a tropical system off the coast of El Salvador which is expected to cross the Central American isthmus.
Eventually it will enter the warm waters of the Caribbean and voila, as of now, the trajectory puts it through the windward channel (ie. Between Cuba and Haiti).
Not only is this an extremely early storm, but its moving in an odd direction (west to east) compared to most other storms, but this is reality as of now.
Since trajectories of these storms change with the whims of winds that guide them, it would be wise to keep an eye on this, at least until Hispaniola is cleared.