cheezyWXguy wrote:philnyc wrote:Sanibel wrote:Disagree with "the atmosphere is not really indicating". If you look at the ITCZ it has a very subtle sign of waves starting to 'stick' as they cross the mid-Atlantic. Looks like prime time almost where suddenly one of those little surviving convection areas spins.
I said not NOW, but then "in one or two weeks, yes". I agree with you about "prime time almost". But at least a week to go...
Yeah...it is getting close to that time of year, however shear and SAL are unfavorable at this time, but in 1-2 weeks, that should change
Absolutely. One thing a lot of people forget is that shear and SAL almost always start out high and then gradually diminish as we move into August. SAL is related to the Mid Level African Easterly Jet in ways nobody really understands well yet. And shear is also obviously very complex, being related to El Nino, Nina, among other things. But the climatology shows us very clearly that both NORMALLY ease as we go into August. It's not a coincidence that the climatology also shows us that Cape Verde season doesn't get going until August. If you think of it that way, and look at the current model forecasts, such as GFS global, everything is on schedule for a dropoff in SAL and shear.
BTW, here's the climatological norm for the MLAEJ during July 1 to July 19 for 1968-1996:

and here's the July 1 to July 19 2007 config:
Since (so far) the MLAEJ is stronger and farther north than usual, it is one of several indicators that still point to an active CV season. But all that goes BOOM can go BUST. We'll see.