Exactly...african dust pushing east to west across south florida at the present time...
per NWS Miami:
DISCUSSION...
THE EAST AND WEST COAST SEA BREEZES HAVE DEVELOPED EARLY THIS
AFTERNOON ALONG BOTH COAST...AS THE AFRICAN DUST MOVED INTO THE
SOUTHERN PORTION OF THE CWA EARLY THIS AFTERNOON FROM THE BAHAMA
ISLANDS. THIS HAS HELPED TO KEEP THE SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS
FROM DEVELOPING OVER THE SOUTHERN PORTION OF THE CWA EARLY THIS
AFTERNOON. HOWEVER...SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WERE DEVELOPING
ALONG THE WEST COAST SEA BREEZE OVER THE WESTERN INTERIOR AREAS OF
THE CWA EARLY THIS AFTERNOON.
THE AFRICAN DUST WILL CONTINUE TO MOVE WEST THROUGH SOUTHERN
PORTION OF THE CWA THIS AFTERNOON AND BE WEST OF THE AREA TONIGHT.
NWS Miami mentions wave in atlantic:
EXTENDED FORECAST...
THE HIGH WILL CONTINUE TO MOVE NORTH INTO CENTRAL FLORIDA EARLY
NEXT WEEK...AS A TROPICAL WAVE OVER THE CENTRAL ATLANTIC WATERS
CONTINUES TO MOVE WEST TO NORTHWEST TOWARDS SOUTH FLORIDA. THIS
WILL ALLOW FOR DEEPER MOISTURE TO WORK INTO THE AREA...AND ALLOW
FOR THE EASTERN WINDS TO RETURN. HOWEVER...IF THE TROPICAL WAVE
BECOME MORE ORGANIZE...THEN THE STEERING CURRENTS FROM THE LONG
RANGE MODELS SHOW THAT IT COULD GET PUSHED NORTH AND EAST OF THE AREA
FROM A DEVELOPING TROUGH OF LOW PRESSURE IN THE CENTRAL GULF OF
MEXICO. SO AT THIS TIME WILL LEAVE SCATTERED SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS OVER SOUTH FLORIDA FOR THE EARLY TO MIDDLE OF NEXT
WEEK, BUT THIS MIGHT NEED TO BE CHANGE IN LATER FORECAST DEPENDING
ON THE POSITION OF THE TROPICAL WAVE OR LOW.
FOR THE LATEST INFORMATION ON THE TROPICAL WAVE...PLEASE SEE THE
TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK FROM THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER.
cheezyWXguy wrote:CrazyC83 wrote:Aric Dunn wrote:check out the SAL plume over the western and central carrib !! and 97 L has drawn in some of that SAL but its not too bad .. bad enough though be limiting any deep convection at the moment..

That will save it from having any significant land areas. Even if by some miracle this develops, it will get eaten alive by good ol' Sally.
Well its not like the SAL just sits there... It moves west and diffuses or moves on to land or into the EPAC. Just because its there now doesnt mean itll still be there by then. And seeing as the TUTT is forecast to move away by that time, conditions should really improve about 4 days down the road. The question is, what shape will the system be in by that time, because if its still active with convection and whatever circulation it has currently, then theres always a possibility. And since it is so close to home (by then), it must be watched.