000 AXNT20 KNHC 151623 TWDAT Tropical Weather Discussion NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL 1805 UTC Mon Nov 15 2021 Tropical Weather Discussion for North America, Central America Gulf of Mexico, 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 1200 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through 1700 UTC. ...MONSOON TROUGH/ITCZ... The monsoon trough extends to the coastal border of Guinea and Sierra Leone near 09N13W. The ITCZ continues from 09N13W to 08N25W with scattered moderate convection noted from 06N to 10N between 18W to 21W. A surface trough intercepts the ITCZ stretching from 12N26W to 06N27W. The remainder of the ITCZ continues from 08N28W to 06N50W. GULF OF MEXICO... High pressure centered along the central coast of Louisiana dominates the Gulf allowing dry conditions to prevail. Winds are light to gentle in the NW half of the Gulf, with moderate NE winds occurring over the SE. Seas are 2 to 4 ft. The high pressure centered near the Louisiana coast will strengthen some as it shifts to the southeastern United States on Tue. Fresh to strong east winds will develop over the southeastern Gulf and Straits of Florida Tue through early Thu along with building seas. A cold front will move across the NW Gulf Thu, then across the rest of the Gulf through Fri afternoon. The front will be followed by mainly fresh northeast winds. Scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms are expected ahead of this front. CARIBBEAN SEA... A stationary front reaches from central Cuba to the Gulf of Honduras. Scattered moderate convection is noted within 150 nm of this boundary. The monsoon trough extends along 09N from northern Colombia to the Panama-Costa Rica border. Scattered moderate convection is occurring within 90 nm north of this boundary. Mainly moderate NE winds are in the northwest Caribbean while moderate to fresh E winds dominate the remainder of the basin, with localized strong winds pulsing offshore northern Colombia. Seas average 4 to 6 ft. The stationary front will gradually dissipate through Tue. Meanwhile, high pressure will continue to support moderate to fresh trades across most of the basin, pulsing to strong off the coast of Colombia. The ridge will begin to strengthen on Wed leading to increasing winds over the central Caribbean. ATLANTIC OCEAN... A stationary front extends from 32N25W to 24N46W. No significant convection is occurring with this front, but fresh to strong ENE winds are present within 200 nm N of the boundary. Seas across a broad area of the Atlantic from 10N to 30N between 25W and 55W average 10 to 13 ft. To the west, a cold front has now stalled from 32N71W through the central Bahamas and into central Cuba. Scattered moderate convection is N of 28N between 55W and 65W. To the N and W of the boundary, moderate to fresh NW winds prevail. Seas are 5 to 7 ft. A mid and upper level low pressure near 18N46W is inducing scattered moderate convection from 16N to 23N between 40W and 50W. Elsewhere across the basin, winds are generally moderate, with seas of 4 to 7 ft, except 1 to 3 ft near the Bahamas. The Cumbre Vieja volcano, on the island of La Palma in the Canary Islands, has been erupting since 19 September 2021. Marine and aviation interests should monitor this ongoing situation by reading the Volcanic Ash Advisory issued by Meteo-France, at http://vaac.meteo.fr/volcanoes/la-palma/. For the forecast, the northern part of the stationary front will move east as a cold front, leaving a stationary boundary along about 22N trailing behind it. To the north, high pressure will build in. The gradient between the high and the lower pressure with the stalled boundary will lead to increasing winds and building seas mid to late week. Looking ahead, a cold front will move into the waters off northeast Florida Fri. $$ Mora