xcool22 wrote:Alyono wrote:TheStormExpert wrote:Here we are on September 7th just days away from the peak day of the season with nothing much to talk about other than a struggling area of interest near the Cape Verde Islands.
My question is why is the Atlantic struggling so badly to produce at least a single tropical cyclone near the peak day in what was supposed to be an near normal to slightly above average season?
Wind Shear isn't terribly bad but it could be a little better for this time of year. SAL has diminished drastically over the past week. The MJO is forecasted to become more favorable towards Atlantic tropical cyclone development, and their currently I believe is a passing Kelvin Wave through the Atlantic basin. The only significant inhibitor is increased levels of Mid-Level Dry Air in the Tropical Atlantic.
So what is putting a lid on the Atlantic at the moment?
Not saying season cancel at all especially when Florida just had their first hurricane landfall in nearly 11 years.
welcome to the quiet phase
what you meaing
quiet phase ???
Multi-decadal cycles. We have periods where things are active and then periods where it is quiet. May even have millennial time scale cycles involved as well.