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I think the uncertainties are being greatly exaggerated. The most reliable intensity models which now form the consensus have been consistently trending downward in their forecasts, excepting the LGEM, which continues to show a major hurricane, but only after three days (the same time period it showed two days ago, meaning the model has kept pushing back the time line for intensification). Practically all the models now show only a strong tropical storm as late as seven days out. People are getting too hung-up on the temporary satellite appearances. Last night, the talk was about how great the system supposedly looked. Well, the fact is that most storms usually look great during the diurnal maximum when lapse rates are steepest. Predictably, better organization of the low meant the circulation would draw in more of the stable, dry air mass to its north. The Saharan Air Layer is going to be a serious problem over at least the next four days as a heat ridge building off Africa causes the system to speed up and ingest more dry desert air. (And where there is dusty air, there is almost always wind shear due to enhanced easterlies preventing the center from organizing.) Along with a TUTT low the system will encounter starting in three days, the sheared, SAL-infested environment is what the models are seeing, thereby causing them to show a much weaker system, probably 50 mph or less, passing through the Lesser Antilles in about three and a half days.
Look at all the stratocumuli stretching across most of the basin...they show just how stable the Atlantic is:
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/east/natl/vis.jpgDue to the weakness of the system, no one should be surprised that the overwhelming model trend over the past few days - including all the GFS and ECMWF ensembles, the reliable operational models, and even less reliable models like the BAMD and BAMS suites - has been faster and farther southwest by day four and beyond. Given the likely weakness of the system, according to climatology a track south of, rather than over or north of, Hispaniola is increasingly likely. Now most of the ensembles, day five and beyond, are trending as far west as FL and the eastern Gulf, and the consensus in four days is south of Hispaniola, so given further reductions in the intensity forecasts, expect the southwesterly trends to continue. In my view, this system will not develop into a strong TS by the time it crosses the dry graveyard of the Atlantic / Eastern Caribbean and enters the more unstable, reduced-shear environment just east of the Yucatán peninsula. Think Ernesto redux, only perhaps this time posing a much greater threat to the northwestern Gulf (TX / LA). And as this system will be entering the Gulf in the prime of the season, climatology would strongly suggest that hurricane growth is quite possible after day seven. The Gulf looks more like the real target at this stage.