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Tropical Weather Discussion

Status

Issued Active alert

Start Time

Sat 05/02/2026 02:15 PM EDT

End Time

Sat 05/02/2026 08:15 PM EDT

Impacts

Informational

Full Alert Message

Tropical Weather Discussion NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL 1815 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 1200 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through 1610 UTC. ...SPECIAL FEATURES... Gulf of America Gale Warning: A cold front extends from northern Florida to just south of Tampico, Mexico. Strong to near-gale force NE to N winds, with frequent gusts to gale force, encompass the north-central and western Gulf waters behind the cold front. Satellite altimeter and moored buoy data indicates seas ranging from 8-11 ft. Sustained gale force winds are currently offshore Tampico, Mexico, and will spread southward to offshore Veracruz today, then persist off of Veracruz into Sun morning. Seas will build to 12 ft in strongest winds. Marine conditions will improve by early Mon with ridging gradually building back over the basin into early Tue. 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, and also consult products issued by your local National Weather Service forecast office for details over the coastal waters. ...TROPICAL WAVES... A tropical wave is along 33W, from 12N southward, moving west at 10-15 kt. Scattered moderate convection is near the southern tip of the wave axis, from 01N to 04N between 29W and 33W. Elsewhere, the wave continues to move through hostile dry conditions which inhibit other impacts. ...MONSOON TROUGH/ITCZ... The monsoon trough extends from 08N12W to 03N18W. The ITCZ continues from 03N18W to 02S45W. Scattered moderate isolated strong convection is from 05S to the equator between 30W and 40W. GULF OF AMERICA... Please see the SPECIAL FEATURES section above for information on a Gale Warning for the western Gulf. As referenced above, a cold front extends from northern Florida to near Tampico, Mexico, with fresh to strong winds and frequent gusts to gale-force behind it. Scattered moderate convection is along the front, from 26N to 30N east of 87W. Outside of the gale warning, seas range from 5-7 ft behind the front. Ahead of the front, gentle to moderate S to SW winds and 3-5 ft seas prevail. For the forecast, the cold front from the Big Bend of Florida to near Veracruz, Mexico will reach from SW Florida to the Bay of Campeche Sun morning, then stall and gradually wash out by Mon morning. Fresh to strong N to NE winds will continue behind the front, along with near gale to gale-force N winds close to the coast near Tampico. The gales will slide along the coast near Veracruz today and tonight, before diminishing Sun afternoon. Mon and Tue should see quiescent conditions prevailing across the Gulf. Looking ahead, moderate to fresh SE to S return flow will set up in the W Gulf Tue night and Wed. CARIBBEAN SEA... The pressure gradient between a 1019 mb high pressure in the Atlantic near 26N62W and a 1008 mb low pressure over northern Colombia is sustaining fresh to strong trades in the south-central Caribbean off the coast of Colombia and within the Gulf of Venezuela. Seas are 6-7 ft in these areas. Elsewhere, moderate to fresh trades prevail across the basin per the latest satellite scatterometer data. Seas are 4-6 ft across the basin. Scattered moderate isolated strong convection is across the southwestern Caribbean, south of 12N, between 75W and 84W. This includes coastal regions of Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. For the forecast, the pressure gradient between high pressure north of the area and the Colombian Low will support fresh to strong trades over the S central Caribbean and moderate to fresh trades over the remainder of the E and central Caribbean for the next several days. The SE fresh to strong winds over the Gulf of Honduras will diminish on Sun as a weakening cold front approaches the Yucatan Channel. After the cold front dissipates near the Yucatan Channel on Mon, expect SE winds over the Gulf of Honduras to increase Tue and Wed. ATLANTIC OCEAN... A weakening frontal boundary from 31N56W to 31N70W continues to lose definition and shower activity. 1019 mb high pressure centered near 26N62W and 1021 mb high pressure centered north of the Canary Islands provide for broad surface ridging across the tropical Atlantic waters. Satellite scatterometer detected light to gentle trade winds across the basin, increasing to moderate speeds south of 10N. Satellite altimeter supports an analysis of 4-7 ft seas across open waters. For the forecast west of 55W, the aforementioned frontal boundary from near 31N56W to 29N65W to 31N71W will weaken and shift slightly east today. A new, stronger cold front will emerge off of the SE United States coast this afternoon and reach from near 31N72W to the N Bahamas on Sun morning, and from 31N60W to a low forming near the N Bahamas Mon morning. The low will ride along the frontal boundary to be just south of Bermuda Tue morning with the front extending southwestward to the central Bahamas. The front should be dissipating by Wed morning. Expect fresh to strong SW winds south of the front today and Sun, followed by fresh to strong NE winds north of the front on Mon and Tue. Looking ahead, conditions should become quiescent Tue night into Wed.