Tropical Weather Discussion
Status
Issued Active alertStart Time
Wed 06/10/2026 12:05 AM EDTEnd Time
Wed 06/10/2026 06:05 AM EDTImpacts
Informational
Full Alert Message
Tropical Weather Discussion NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL 0405 UTC Wed Jun 10 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 0000 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through 0100 UTC. ...SPECIAL FEATURES... Tropical Storm Cristina is centered near 12.4N 88.2W at 10/0300 UTC, moving west at 2 kt. Estimated minimum central pressure is 1006 mb. Maximum sustained wind speed is 35 kt with gusts to 45 kt. Peak seas are currently around 12-13 ft or 4.0 m. Scattered to numerous moderate and isolated strong convection is noted from 09N to 15N between 86W and 93W. Cristina is moving slowly toward the west. A turn to the west-northwest and northwest is forecast over the next couple of days. On the forecast track, Cristina should move near or along the coasts of Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Salvador through midweek. Slight strengthening is possible through Wednesday, with weakening expected Wednesday night or Thu after Cristina moves inland. Heavy rainfall associated with Tropical Storm Cristina will impact coastal portions of Central America through Thu. This rainfall may produce life-threatening flooding and mudslides, especially in areas of steep terrain. Please read the latest HIGH SEAS FORECAST issued by the National Hurricane Center at website - https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/MIAHSFEP2.shtml and the latest Cristina NHC Forecast/Advisory and Public Advisory at www.hurricanes.gov for more details. ...INTERTROPICAL CONVERGENCE ZONE/MONSOON TROUGH... A monsoon trough extends from northern Colombia to across Panama at 08N77W to NW Costa Rica at 10.5N86W, then resumes W of Tropical Storm Cristina SW of Guatemala at 13N92W to 09N124W. The ITCZ extends from 09N124W to 10N138W. Scattered moderate isolated strong convection is noted from 01N to 04N between 83W and 86W, from 07N to 12N between 93W and 104W, and from 12N to 16N between 95W and 104W, from 05N to 09N between 129W and 133W, from 10.5N to 12N between 135W and 137.5W, and from 03N to 06.5N between 138W and 140W. ...OFFSHORE WATERS WITHIN 250 NM OF MEXICO... Post-Tropical Cyclone Boris dissipated during the afternoon hours across the interior of western Guerrero, Mexico. Scattered showers continue across much of the interior highlands of the area. Ridging extends from NW of the area to SE to the Revillagigedo Islands. Broad low pressure extends from southern California SSE into Baja California Norte. This pattern is supporting moderate to fresh NW-N winds offshore Baja California Norte. Moderate to fresh W-NW winds are noted from 19.5N to 23N to the E of 110.5W, locally strong off Cabo San Lucas. Winds are moderate or weaker across the remainder of the offshore waters of Mexico, including in the Gulf of California. Seas are 7-10 ft in mixed S and NW swells off Baja California, and 7-11 ft in mainly S-SW swell E of 110W. In the Gulf of California, seas are 3 ft or less, except 4-7 ft near the entrance in the southerly swell. For the forecast, a broad surface ridge extending into the waters W of the Revillagigedo Islands will weaken and shift westward Wed through the upcoming weekend, as broad low pressure along the coast of southern California drifts westward. This will lead to light to gentle winds across the waters of Baja California, and moderate to locally fresh SW to S winds inside the Gulf of California. Afternoon and evening winds will pulse moderate to locally fresh near the coast Fri through the weekend. Northerly swell will merge with strong S swell moving through the Baja waters this afternoon through Wed to maintain rough seas before subsiding. Gentle to locally moderate NW to W winds will dominate the waters between Cabo Corrientes and Tehunatepec through Fri, then weaken into the weekend. Large cross- equatorial S-SW swell dominating those waters will gradually subside tonight through Wed, while mixed swells off Baja Norte to rough linger through Thu. ....OFFSHORE WATERS WITHIN 250 NM OF CENTRAL AMERICA, COLOMBIA, AND WITHIN 750 NM OF ECUADOR... Please see the Special Features section for details on Tropical Storm Cristina, just offshore of the Gulf of Fonseca. Active nearby convection is described above. Moderate to fresh winds surround Cristina from roughly 09N to 14N between 86W and 93W. Winds are moderate or weaker across the remainder of the waters, locally moderate to fresh out of the SE near the Galapagos Islands. Seas are 7-11 ft N of the Equator, and 6-8 ft S of the Equator across those waters from Ecuador to the Galapagos Islands. For the forecast, Tropical Storm Cristina will move to 12.4N 88.4W Wed morning, 12.8N 88.9W Wed evening, 13.7N 89.3W Thu morning, weaken as a post-tropical cyclone near 15.0N 89.8W Thu evening, and dissipate Fri morning. Heavy rainfall is expected across coastal portions of Nicaragua and El Salvador and may produce life-threatening flooding and mudslides, especially in areas of steep terrain. Otherwise, large cross-equatorial S-SW swell will continue to impact the regional tonight through Wed before subsiding, resulting in large and powerful surf along the coasts. Refer to your local meteorological information for more details on the surf zone and beach impacts. Gentle to moderate winds and moderate seas will prevail across the offshore waters Thu into the weekend, except locally rough seas in new southerly swell near the Galapagos Islands Thu and Thu night. ...REMAINDER OF THE AREA... The remnant low of Post-Tropical Cyclone Amanda is analyzed W of 140W near 10.5N141W. Ridging extends from NW to SE from 30N139W to near 16N113W. This pressure pattern is supporting moderate to fresh trades from 11N to 27N W of 125W, and from 25N to 30N between 118W. Winds are mainly moderate or weaker elsewhere across the open waters, except moderate to locally fresh between 90W and 105W. For seas, mixed northerly and southerly swell supports 7-10 ft seas N of 20N and E of 128W. Southerly swells combined with trade winds supports 6-9 ft seas from 10N to 22N. Decaying long-period cross-equatorial S-SW swell supports seas of 7-10 ft N of 04N and E of 115W. Seas of 5-7 ft cover the remainder of the open waters in mixed swells. For the forecast, moderate to locally fresh trades will continue to dominate the waters N of 10N and W of 115W or 120W under the broad ridge through Wed, then will weaken as the high begins to shift NE through the end of the week. Winds will be moderate or weaker elsewhere through tonight through Wed. Meanwhile, northerly swell in the N-central waters will produce seas of 7-10 ft for the next several days, merging with large cross- equatorial southerly swell. That cross-equatorial swell will rough seas N of 04N and E of 115W will decay tonight through early Wed. New southerly swell will build seas back to locally rough S of 08N and E of 125W Thu into early Fri before decaying. Moderate seas will dominate the open waters by the end of the week into the upcoming weekend.