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Tropical Weather Discussion

Status

Issued Active alert

Start Time

Thu 06/25/2026 12:05 PM EDT

End Time

Thu 06/25/2026 06:05 PM EDT

Impacts

Informational

Full Alert Message

Tropical Weather Discussion NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL 1605 UTC Thu Jun 25 2026 Tropical Weather Discussion for the eastern Pacific Ocean from 03.4S to 30N, east of 120W including the Gulf of California, and from the Equator to 30N, between 120W and 140W. The following information is based on satellite imagery, weather observations, radar, and meteorological analysis. Based on 1200 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through 1500 UTC. ...TROPICAL WAVES... The axis of a tropical wave is near 99W, south of 16N, moving west around 20 kt. Scattered moderate and isolated strong convection is occurring from 09N-14N between 99W-103W. The axis of a tropical wave is near 106W, south of 17N, moving westward at around 10 kt. Numerous moderate and scattered strong convection is noted from 10N-19N between 104W-108W. The axis of a tropical wave is near 120W, south of 21N, moving westward at around 10 to 15 kt. No significant deep convection is occurring with this system this morning. ...INTERTROPICAL CONVERGENCE ZONE/MONSOON TROUGH... The monsoon trough extends from coastal Costa Rica at 10N84W to 08N92W to 13N113W to 10N124W. The ITCZ extends from 10N124W to beyond 08N140W. Numerous moderate and scattered strong convection is noted from 10N-19N between 104W-108W and from 03N-07N between 93W-97W. Scattered moderate and isolated strong convection is occurring from 09N-14N between 99W-103W and from 04N-09N between 78W-87W. ...OFFSHORE WATERS WITHIN 250 NM OF MEXICO... A Tehauntepec gap wind event is producing fresh to strong N to NE winds with seas 7-9 ft this morning. A surface ridge extends from 27N120W southeastward to 20N108W. Winds elsewhere across the offshore waters are moderate or weaker. Seas on the Pacific waters are 5-6 ft in S to SW swell and are 2-4 ft over the Gulf of California waters. For the forecast, low pressure over the deep tropics will continue inducing fresh to strong N to NE gap winds across the Gulf of Tehuantepec through tomorrow. Elsewhere, winds and seas across the Mexican offshore waters should be quiescent through early next week. Looking ahead, large NW swell may move into the waters off Baja California Norte starting Sun night. ....OFFSHORE WATERS WITHIN 250 NM OF CENTRAL AMERICA, COLOMBIA, AND WITHIN 750 NM OF ECUADOR... A gap wind event is forcing fresh to strong NE winds across the Gulf of Papagayo region this morning with seas 7-9 ft. Elsewhere winds are moderate or weaker. Seas are 7-9 ft in S swell over the equatorial waters and 5-6 ft in SW swell over the remainder of the offshore waters. For the forecast, the pressure difference between high pressure north of the area and the monsoon trough farther south is supporting a Gulf of Papagayo region gap wind event. Fresh to strong NE to E winds should last through early next week. Elsewhere, winds should remain quiescent. Large S swell moving into the equatorial waters tonight will continue through Sat night. ...REMAINDER OF THE AREA... A 1008 mb low is centered near 18N121W. Winds within 120 NM in the N semicircle are fresh to strong with seas 6-7 ft. A surface ridge extends from a 1032 mb high at 37N149W southeastward to 30N130W to 27N120W to 20N108W. The moderate pressure gradient between the ridge and lower pressure over the monsoon trough/ITCZ is forcing moderate to fresh NE trades between 10N and the ridge. Elsewhere, winds across the open Pacific are moderate or weaker. Seas are 5-8 ft in mixed SW and N swell.