***NEW***                               Surf Weather Outlook

Updated at 00:00EDT


None
0% chance of TS conditions


None
0% chance of TS conditions





The Atlantic basin is back to a very quiet period. A frontal boundary sagging southward continues to produce convection from the northeast Gulf to Bermuda. An upper level low near 25N/45W is controlling the weather across much of the central basin. To its south, an abundance of dry air is keeping things quiet from 30W to 50W north of 10N while the ITCZ is generating scattered moderate convection south of 10N. A tropical wave that exitted the west African coast on Sunday is positioned near 30W. Convection is confined to the ITCZ while a bare circulation is visible near 10N/33W. Another wave is located near 10N/55W. Moisture is outrunning the wave axis and the disturbance is rapidly losing organization. A third tropical wave is located along 75W in the east-central Caribbean. It is very much devoid of convection while a bare circulation is visible near 16N/76W.

No tropical cyclone development is expected through Friday.



Invest 93L has become more disorganized over the last 24 hours, and its no longer recognized as a threat for tropical cyclone development. The moisture remanants of the wave will be pulled into the east coast trough, contributing to rainy weather across the southeast.

Elsewhere in the Atlantic, dry air and shear has a strangle hold on much of the central basin. Subsidence in assocation with confluent flow aloft is keeping the Caribbean devoid of any convection.

A new interest has moved off the African coast yesterday and although convection has waned, a low level turning remains well defined with an inverted v signiture in the low clouds.