Here are the next 5 days:

Could put a damper on convection.
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Spacecoast wrote:NASA seems to have the best SAL Forecast tool.
Here are the next 5 days:
[url]https://i.ibb.co/QPzZjLt/Animation.gif [/url]
Could put a damper on convection.
IcyTundra wrote:I think we could see an increase in activity during the last third of September but overall I expect the next 2 weeks to be fairly quiet with any storms that do form being fairly weak. Towards the end of the month we should also be in a more favorable MJO phase so that should help some too. Also have to watch out for waves that struggle in the MDR due to dry air and wind shear but are able to find more favorable conditions in the Carribean and become a threat to landmasses. I'll enjoy this lull with no threats to land but I am fully expecting things to pick up towards the end of the month and into October.
Spacecoast wrote:NASA seems to have the best SAL Forecast tool.
Here are the next 5 days:
[url]https://i.ibb.co/QPzZjLt/Animation.gif [/url]
Could put a damper on convection.
Shell Mound wrote:IcyTundra wrote:I think we could see an increase in activity during the last third of September but overall I expect the next 2 weeks to be fairly quiet with any storms that do form being fairly weak. Towards the end of the month we should also be in a more favorable MJO phase so that should help some too. Also have to watch out for waves that struggle in the MDR due to dry air and wind shear but are able to find more favorable conditions in the Carribean and become a threat to landmasses. I'll enjoy this lull with no threats to land but I am fully expecting things to pick up towards the end of the month and into October.
So you're staying that there will be no more CV threats to the CONUS in 2021?
Maybe the crow will not be served to some of the bears here.
Shell Mound wrote:Spacecoast wrote:NASA seems to have the best SAL Forecast tool.
Here are the next 5 days:
[url]https://i.ibb.co/QPzZjLt/Animation.gif [/url]
Could put a damper on convection.
So can we admit that the MDR is underperforming relative to expectations for a second consecutive year?
aspen wrote:Mid-late October could be nasty with a Kelvin Wave moving into a Nina-favored western Atlantic.
It’s not all bears for September, as the Euro ensembles and other models suggest there are 3 waves in the next 10-12 days with chances to develop. However, this really doesn’t feel like September; it still seems like mid-late August when we’ve gotten a big storm (in this situation, Larry) but are still waiting for the switch to be flipped as we enter the peak of the season. Climo Peak Day is Friday, and it feels like the switch was turned on for 2-3 weeks but has been switched off already.
AlphaToOmega wrote:There was an SAL outbreak last month. We got Hurricane Ida that month. Do not write off a season because of SAL. This is not even an outbreak.
P.S. I want to remind you all of September 2010, a month with a lot of SAL during September. Despite the SAL outbreak, it managed to produce 8 storms.
Be patient, folks! September is most likely going to be very active still
Shell Mound wrote:Spacecoast wrote:NASA seems to have the best SAL Forecast tool.
Here are the next 5 days:
[url]https://i.ibb.co/QPzZjLt/Animation.gif [/url]
Could put a damper on convection.
So can we admit that the MDR is underperforming relative to expectations for a second consecutive year?
AlphaToOmega wrote:There was an SAL outbreak last month. We got Hurricane Ida that month. Do not write off a season because of SAL. This is not even an outbreak.
P.S. I want to remind you all of September 2010, a month with a lot of SAL during September. Despite the SAL outbreak, it managed to produce 8 storms.
Be patient, folks! September is most likely going to be very active still
aspen wrote:Mid-late October could be nasty with a Kelvin Wave moving into a Nina-favored western Atlantic.
It’s not all bears for September, as the Euro ensembles and other models suggest there are 3 waves in the next 10-12 days with chances to develop. However, this really doesn’t feel like September; it still seems like mid-late August when we’ve gotten a big storm (in this situation, Larry) but are still waiting for the switch to be flipped as we enter the peak of the season. Climo Peak Day is Friday, and it feels like the switch was turned on for 2-3 weeks but has been switched off already.
CyclonicFury wrote:We literally just had a major hurricane in the MDR, something not every year has. People set their expectations way too high for the MDR. Seasons like 2004 or 2017 with multiple MDR origin major hurricanes headed for the CONUS are the exception, not the norm.
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