The system north of the Bahamas and about 200 miles off the Central Florida coast is just a minor empty swirl of clouds. All the thunderstorms are being blown off to the east by strong upper-level winds, and thereās going to be a front bearing down from the west. So thereās only a slight chance the system will have time to develop, and itās very unlikely that anything significant could evolve.
The system will drift north, and itās forecast to encounter the front pushing off the East Coast around the weekend. The upper-level winds will be mostly hostile to significant development, so itās most likely to be absorbed in the frontal system.
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The combo with the front might develop into a weak norāeaster-type system near the Mid-Atlantic coast late in the weekend and early next week, but itās uncertain. The computer forecast models are not settled on how these various parts are going to interact.
Elsewhere in the tropics, nothing is cooking. The overall atmospheric pattern has become somewhat hostile to development. The environment might change for the second half of October. Weāll see.
Letās enjoy the quiet while it exists.