canetracker wrote: BB: I love your committment and am sure watching your predictions to see what happens. This is kind of like reverse blob watching. Instead, it is watching for where the next blob/TC will form.
I know the GFS is not always accurate, but it is picking up on lots of convection in the area you have mentioned around the time you have mentioned. Could this be a sign of things to come?? Who knows but I will continue to watch.
Keep up the posts and thanks for your insight.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod/analysis/
Not sure what you are seeing...but looking at the GFS for next week...I see NO precip in the middle GOM from the 14th to the 16th. There is NWly flow over most of the cntl and eastern GOM due to a longwave trof over the eastern US that sweeps through earlier in the week...plus some decent westerlies at 300 and 200 (50 kts at 200mb by the 16th according to the 12z run). Those factors will dry out the central and eastern GOM quickly. BY the 16th...thre are still widespread winds from the NW and west aloft. Given the longwave is supposed to nose down in less than 100 hours...I don't think the GFS is going to be totallu hosed...and the ridge currently to the north should keep the GOM dry...which it currently is. Yes there is a little moisture out there but look at the WV...it's dry.
http://www.nco.ncep.noaa.gov/pmb/nwprod ... 0_174l.gif
Bottom line is this: If the upper level charts verify as the read now (and even the Euro and CMC have westerlies over the GOM next week), it won't be conducive for the development of any convection. Things can change in the long term and there is a tropical wave out there that will move into the GOM late next week...but there is also a long wave that is going to dry it out in the mid and upper levels early next week.