Honeyko wrote:Boy, that ridge axis is very strong, though.AJC3 wrote:The vort center associated with this wave, which had been a bit more compact earlier, appears to be elongating toward the NE, and has gained quite bit of latitude, with the center of the vort lobe now crossing 25N. What's left of the low level ridge axis has dropped south to near Lake Okeechobee and will collapse by Thursday, so SW low-mid level flow is poised to develop across the Florida peninsula. Since a shallow feature such as this will follow the low to mid level steering flow, there's no way that the wave will reach the FL east coast now, and whatever does or (more likely) doesn't develop out of this wave should eventually turn NE somewhere between 75 and 77W.
Maybe I'm just seeing things, but there's seems to be a hint of a left turn in recent frames.
The low to mid level reflection of the Atlantic ridge is quite weak west of 75W. You can pretty much ignore what's going on between 500MB and 200MB. The system is too shallow to be steered by these winds aloft.