'CaneFreak wrote:Thermodynamically, the Atlantic is primed and ready for an active season. The waters easily support a major hurricane throughout most of the basin. The general problem so far and continues to be an overall lack of tropical disturbances with strong pre-existing vorticity. With the MJO being forecasted to remain in the circle of death for the foreseeable future, we are going to have to get some strong tropical waves to move off of Africa soon. I just don't see much else that will instigate tropical cyclones right now throughout the Atlantic domain. I must say I am pretty shocked at the lack of disturbances that we have seen so far but take heart little ones. This season is far from over. The peak is still 4 weeks away and we have all of September and October as well. A lot can happen in 12 weeks time.
http://tropic.ssec.wisc.edu/real-time/s ... vmid&time=
mid level dry air is what is destroying the waves. i dont think i have ever seen a season with so few waves with convection across the atlantic. wxman57 said there will be a tropical pattern change next week.