Tropical Discussion Issued at 06:14Z 01:14:28.1389

AXNT20 KNHC 020614

TWDAT

Tropical Weather Discussion

NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL

0615 UTC Sat May 2 2026

Tropical Weather Discussion for North America, Central America

Gulf of America, Caribbean Sea, northern sections of South

America, and Atlantic Ocean to the African coast from the

Equator to 31N. The following information is based on satellite

imagery, weather observations, radar and meteorological analysis.

Based on 0000 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through

0550 UTC.

...SPECIAL FEATURES...

Gulf of America Gale Warning: A strong late-season cold front

extends across northern Florida to Cedar Key then stalls across

the NE Gulf to a 1005 mb low offshore Texas near 27N94W and then

transitions back to a cold front that continues SW to NE Mexico

near 24N98W. The front is supporting scattered to numerous

showers and thunderstorms, mainly along the western portion.

Winds are increasing behind the front with fresh to strong out of

the NE, developing frequent gusts to gale-force, and building

seas. By Sat morning, the front is forecast to extend from

northern Florida to near Poza Rica, Mexico, and then from south

Florida to the central Bay of Campeche by Sun morning. The front

will continue to be followed by fresh to strong north to northeast

winds, with winds reaching gale-force offshore Tampico by Sat

morning, and offshore Veracruz Sat afternoon and night. Frequent

gusts to gale-force are also forecast in the NW Gulf, including in

the coastal waters. Rough seas up to 12 ft are expected with the

strongest winds over the SW Gulf. Marine conditions should

significantly improve early next week.

Mariners are advised to keep up with the latest forecasts. Please

read the latest HIGH SEAS FORECAST issued by the National

Hurricane Center at website -

https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/MIAHSFAT2.shtml for more details.

...TROPICAL WAVES...

A tropical wave is in the central Atlantic, extending from 00N to

13N with an axis near 28W, moving W at around 10 kt. This wave is

encompassed within a thick Saharan Air Layer with significant dry

air and an otherwise hostile environment preventing any sort of

deep convection. However, scattered moderate isolated strong

convection is confined to the southern portion of the wave near

the ITCZ from 04S to 04N between 24W and 39W.

...MONSOON TROUGH/ITCZ...

The monsoon trough is inland Africa. The ITCZ extends from 02N15W

to 02N25W then resumes near 02N32W and continues to 01N50W.

For information on convection see the Tropical Waves section

above.

...GULF OF AMERICA...

Please see the SPECIAL FEATURES section above for information on

a Gale Warning in the western Gulf.

A strong late-season cold front extends across northern Florida

to Cedar Key then stalls across the NE Gulf to a 1005 mb low

offshore Texas near 27N94W and then transitions back to a cold

front that continues SW to NE Mexico near 24N98W. The front is

supporting scattered to numerous showers and thunderstorms, mainly

along the western portion. Winds are increasing behind the front

with fresh to strong out of the NE, developing frequent gusts to

gale-force, and building seas. Fresh to strong E-SE winds are

near the Yucatan Peninsula, with gentle to moderate SE-S winds

elsewhere ahead of the front. Areas of smoke due to agricultural

and forest fires in southern Mexico are limiting visibility to 3

to 5 miles over the far western Gulf and along the west and

northwest Yucatan coasts in the Bay of Campeche.

For the forecast, by Sat morning, the front will extend from

northern Florida to near Poza Rica, Mexico, and then from south

Florida to the central Bay of Campeche by Sun morning. The front

will continue to be followed by fresh to strong north to northeast

winds, with winds reaching gale-force offshore Tampico by Sat

morning, and offshore Veracruz Sat afternoon and night. Frequent

gusts to gale-force are also forecast in the NW Gulf, including in

the coastal waters. Rough seas up to 12 ft are expected with the

strongest winds over the SW Gulf. Marine conditions should

significantly improve early next week.

...CARIBBEAN SEA...

The pressure gradient between a 1016 mb high pressure E of the SE

Bahamas and a 1006 mb low pressure over northern Colombia is

sustaining fresh to strong trades off northern Colombia and the

Gulf of Venezuela. Seas are 5 to 8 ft in these areas. Fresh to

locally strong E winds are also ongoing N of Honduras in the

vicinity of the Bay Islands and into the Gulf of Honduras, where

seas are moderate to 7 ft. Moderate to fresh easterly trades

prevail elsewhere, along with 3 to 6 ft seas, except for light to

gentle winds in the lee of Cuba. Otherwise, scattered moderate

convection is occurring across the Nicaragua, Panama and Costa

Rica offshore waters.

For the forecast, the pressure gradient between high pressure

north of the area and the Colombian low will support moderate to

fresh trades over the eastern and central Caribbean through Mon,

reaching strong speeds at times in the south-central Caribbean and

in the Gulf of Honduras with locally rough seas. A weakening cold

front will approach the Yucatan Channel by Mon. This will slight

weaken the pressure gradient and winds across the NW Caribbean.

...ATLANTIC OCEAN...

A frontal boundary extends from near Bermuda to NE Florida. Over

the central subtropical waters, a second cold front extends from

31N36W to 27N54W. Ahead of it, a surface trough extends from

30N28W to 21N55W to 20N63W. A 1021 mb high is W of the Canary

Islands extending a broad ridge to remaining central and SW

subtropical waters. Scatterometer data show moderate or weaker

winds associated with these features, which is maintaining

moderate seas in the 5 to 7 ft range.

For the forecast west of 55W, the front will move eastward across

the north waters through Sat while dissipating. The trough will

persist on Sat and then weaken. Another cold front will move off

the northeast Florida coast on Sat, and reach from near 31N71W to

South Florida on Sun, then stall through Mon. A weak low pressure

may develop along the front at that time. Fresh to strong winds

will precede the front on Sat. Mainly fresh northeast to east

winds will follow the front through Mon, along with locally rough

seas near 31N. The remnants of the front should wash out Tue and

Tue night with improving marine conditions through the middle of

next week.

$$

Ramos

Authors

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