Ntxw wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:There have been a few good opportunities for Tropical Development over the past several weeks, but the shear just wouldn't allow development.
Any break in shear for a few days at least could allow for something to possibly form, IF there is even a disturbance present at the time.
I'd like to see a consolidated MCS, something organized roll off the land to trust potential better chance or if a wave can survive the Caribbean and get to the gulf (if that is even possible). Too much has it been strung out, spin a weak low here, weak low there, frontal boundary, none of it is bundled enough to organize too much of a mess.
Yeah, 95L from the week before last is a perfect example of this. That strung out trough axis did produce several Low pressure waves all during that week in the NE GOM, but the shear was relentless. 95L actually begun to organize despite the shear presence and I and several on here actually thought it may have been a tropical depression when it drifted back offshore in Apalachee Bay on August 2. However, shear and land interaction prevented it from being classified as such.
The shear is just too strong across the basin this season. It would not surprise me at all if we do not get any developing tropical cyclones this month. We may get a couple of homegrown systems off the SE U.S. coast or when frontal systems make headway farther south into the GOM as we ehead into September. They will probably be sheared cyclones if we do get such development. I saw wxman57 and NDG allude to 1997 as a good analog to compare this season with that year. I agree.