125 Visitors Tracking The Tropics!
SHOW ME SOME LOVE AND SUPPORT
Website: TrackTheTropics.com/DONATE
Venmo: @TrackTheTropicsLouisiana
Cash App: Cash.App/$TrackTheTropics
Subscribe: FB.com/TrackTheTropics
Website: TrackTheTropics.com/DONATE
Venmo: @TrackTheTropicsLouisiana
Cash App: Cash.App/$TrackTheTropics
Subscribe: FB.com/TrackTheTropics
Track The Tropics is the #1 source to track the tropics 24/7! Since 2013 the main goal of the site is to bring all of the important links and graphics to ONE PLACE so you can keep up to date on any threats to land during the Atlantic Hurricane Season! Hurricane Season 2026 in the Atlantic starts on June 1st and ends on November 30th. Do you love Spaghetti Models? Well you've come to the right place!! Remember when you're preparing for a storm: Run from the water; hide from the wind!
Tropical Atlantic Weather Resources
- NOAA National Hurricane Center
- International Meteorology Database
- FSU Tropical Cyclone Track Probabilities
- Brian McNoldy Atlantic Headquarters
- Brian McNoldy Tropical Satellite Sectors
- Brian McNoldy Infrared Hovmoller
- Brian McNoldy Past TC Radar Loops
- Weather Nerds TC Guidance
- Twister Data Model Guidance
- NOAA Tropical Cyclone Tracks
- Albany GFS/ EURO Models/ Ensembles
- Albany Tropical Cyclone Guidance
- Albany Tropical Atlantic Model Maps
- Pivotal Weather Model Guidance
- Weather Online Model Guidance
- UKMet Model Guidance/ Analysis/ Sat
- ECMWF (EURO) Model Guidance
- FSU Tropical Model Outputs
- FSU Tropical Cyclone Genesis
- Penn State Tropical E-Wall
- NOAA HFIP Ruc Models
- Navy NRL TC Page
- College of DuPage Model Guidance
- WXCharts Model Guidance
- NOAA NHC Analysis Tools
- NOAA NHC ATCF Directory
- NOAA NCEP/EMC Cyclogenesis Tracking
- NOAA NCEP/EMC HWRF Model
- NOAA HFIP Model Products
- University of Miami Ocean Heat
- COLA Max Potential Hurricane Intensity
- Colorado State RAMMB TC Tracking
- Colorado State RAMMB Floaters
- Colorado State RAMMB GOES-16 Viewer
- NOAA NESDIS GOES Satellite
- ASCAT Ocean Surface Winds METOP-A
- ASCAT Ocean Surface Winds METOP-B
- Michael Ventrice Waves / MJO Maps
- TropicalAtlantic.com Analysis / Recon
- NCAR/RAL Tropical Cyclone Guidance
- CyclonicWX Tropical Resources
Historic Louisiana Storms By Month
January
June
July
August
September
October
2025 Graphical Tropical Weather Outlook
2 Day Graphical Tropical Weather Outlook
7 Day Graphical Tropical Weather Outlook
Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook
- Sun, 21 Jun 2026 11:08:15 +0000: NHC Atlantic Tropical Weather Discussion - NHC Tropical Weather Discussion (Atlantic)
000
AXNT20 KNHC 211108
TWDAT
Tropical Weather Discussion
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
1215 UTC Sun Jun 21 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 0600 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through
1045 UTC.
...TROPICAL WAVES...
A far eastern Atlantic tropical wave has its axis along 27W from
03N to 16N. It is moving westward at 10 to 15 kt. This well-
defined in satellite imagery, with a atmospheric moisture
maximum as noted on Total Precipitable Water (MIMIC-TPW)
animation imagery. Scattered moderate convection is from 02N
to 07N between 24W and 30W.
An eastern Atlantic tropical wave has its axis along 42W from 02N
to 17N moving westward at 15 to 20 kt. Scattered moderate
convection is within 180 nm east of the wave from 08N to 10N.
An eastern Caribbean tropical wave has its axis along 64W/65W
south of 19N to inland Venezuela. It is moving westward at
15 to 20 kt. Isolated showers and thunderstorms are east of the
axis in the vicinity of the Windward Islands. Scattered showers
and thunderstorms are well inland Venezuela within 180 nm east of
the wave axis.
A western Caribbean tropical has wave moved inland Central America
near 87W south of south of 19N. It is moving westward near 20 kt.
An upper level low near the Yucatan Peninsula is helping to sustain
scattered moderate to isolated strong convection east of the
northern portion of the wave from along the eastern coast of
Honduras north to 19N between the wave and 83W. For future
information on this wave, please see the eastern Pacific Tropical
Weather Discussion (TWDEP).
...MONSOON TROUGH/ITCZ...
The monsoon trough axis enters the Atlantic ocean near 19N16W,
and continues southwestward to 06N25W and westward to 07N35W to
07N41W and to 06N44W, where it transitions to the ITCZ to the
coast of South America near 03N51W. Scattered moderate convection
is within 180 nm south of the trough between 30W-35W, and
within 120 nm north of the trough between 38W-41W.
...GULF OF AMERICA...
High pressure ridging stretches westward from the western
Atlantic to across Florida and to the central Gulf, reinforced by
a 1016 mb high in the eastern Gulf. The pressure gradient between
the ridge and the relatively lower pressures over Texas and
northeastern Mexico has induced moderate to fresh southeast
winds west of about 88W along with seas of 3 to 6 ft. Elsewhere,
light to gentle winds prevail along with seas of 2 to 4 ft.
Scattered moderate to isolated strong convection is just inland
the coast of Mexico from 20N to 26N supported mainly by a mid-
level low feature and a nearby surface trough. Scattered showers
and a few thunderstorms are over extreme southeast Texas.
For the forecast, the high pressure will change little through
much of the week. The pressure gradient between the high pressure
and relatively lower pressures over Texas and northeastern Mexico
will maintain mostly fresh southerly winds over the western and
central Gulf through late Mon night before diminishing to gentle
to moderate speeds. Slight to moderate seas will be with these
winds. Light winds along with slight seas will be over the eastern
Gulf through Thu night as a new high center becomes situated over
the central Gulf.
...CARIBBEAN SEA...
Please refer to the Tropical Waves section above for convection
across the basin.
Broad high pressure is north of the basin over central Atlantic.
The pressure gradient between the high pressure and lower
pressures in northern South America will continue to generally
allow for fresh to strong trade winds across the central
Caribbean and the western Caribbean south of 19N through Mon.
Seas over the south-central basin waters are 7 to 11 ft as
confirmed by recent satellite altimeter passes and a few buoy
observations. Seas are 4 to 6 ft south of 19N west of 80W.
Moderate to fresh trade winds are elsewhere along with seas
of 5 to 7 ft, except for gentle to moderate east to southeast
winds and seas of 3 to 4 ft over the waters south of Cuba to
near 19N.
An area of scattered to numerous moderate to strong convection
is confined to the southwestern section of the sea south of 12N
and west of 78W to inland Panama, primarily due to the eastern
segment of the East Pacific monsoon trough that reaches into that
part of the basin.
For the forecast, the high pressure will prevail north of the
area into next week. The pressure gradient between the high
pressure and lower pressures in northern South America will
support fresh to strong trade winds and moderate to rough seas in
the central Caribbean through the forecast period. The trade winds
are expected to increase to near gale force across the central
portion of the basin over a large area south of 15N, including
along the coast of Colombia and in the Gulf of Venezuela starting
Mon night through Tue night as Atlantic high pressure shifts
southeastward. Seas are expected to build to around 13 ft with
these winds. Pulsing fresh to strong winds and moderate to rough
seas are expected in the Gulf of Honduras nightly well into the
upcoming week. Moderate to fresh winds are expected over much of
the remainder of the Caribbean through the middle portion of next
week. A tropical wave currently in the eastern Caribbean near 65W
will move across the rest of the eastern Caribbean this morning,
and across the rest of the basin through late Wed. Scattered
showers and thunderstorms are expected mainly east of the wave.
A tropical wave has moved inland Central America, with trailing
scattered moderate to isolated strong convection along the coasts
of eastern Honduras and northeastern Nicaragua, and extending
offshore to near 81W.
...ATLANTIC OCEAN...
Broad high pressure that is anchored by a 1022 high center at 28N53W
covers the area north of about 19N. The associated ridge axis near
26N stretches west-southwestward along 25N/26N to South Florida and
the Straits of Florida. The related pressure gradient is generally
supporting moderate to fresh trade winds and moderate seas across
most of the Atlantic south of about 22N as indicated by overnight
satellite scatterometer data. Gentle to moderate anticyclonic winds
are north of 22N along with seas of 3 to 5 ft in southeast swell
west of 55W, except mixed with northwest swell north of 27N between
55W and 74W, and primarily in northwest swell east of 55W. In the
eastern part of the area, a stationary front is from 32N30W to near
31N39W. No convection is present with this feature. A trough to its
southwest is analyzed from near 31N29W to 28N35W and to 27N39W.
Isolated mostly light showers are possible near this trough.
Upper-level jet dynamics along the southeastern periphery of a broad
upper trough that is along the U.S. east coast are sustaining an
area of scattered showers and thunderstorms north of 28N between 70W
and 78W. A broad mid to upper-level low has helped to induce an area
of multilayer clouds with embedded patches of rain and scattered
showers over the waters northeast of the Lesser Antilles, roughly
from 17N to 27N between 50W and 58W.
For the forecast west of 55W, the weak ridge along 25N/26N will
shift slightly south today, and change little through Thu night as
surface troughing lingers near and offshore Florida. Moderate to
fresh trade winds south of 24N will pulse to strong speeds between
the Turks and Caicos and Hispaniola through the forecast period.
$$
Aguirre
Tropical Weather Discussion
- Sun, 21 Jun 2026 11:08:15 +0000: NHC Atlantic Tropical Weather Discussion - NHC Tropical Weather Discussion (Atlantic)
000
AXNT20 KNHC 211108
TWDAT
Tropical Weather Discussion
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
1215 UTC Sun Jun 21 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 0600 UTC surface analysis and satellite imagery through
1045 UTC.
...TROPICAL WAVES...
A far eastern Atlantic tropical wave has its axis along 27W from
03N to 16N. It is moving westward at 10 to 15 kt. This well-
defined in satellite imagery, with a atmospheric moisture
maximum as noted on Total Precipitable Water (MIMIC-TPW)
animation imagery. Scattered moderate convection is from 02N
to 07N between 24W and 30W.
An eastern Atlantic tropical wave has its axis along 42W from 02N
to 17N moving westward at 15 to 20 kt. Scattered moderate
convection is within 180 nm east of the wave from 08N to 10N.
An eastern Caribbean tropical wave has its axis along 64W/65W
south of 19N to inland Venezuela. It is moving westward at
15 to 20 kt. Isolated showers and thunderstorms are east of the
axis in the vicinity of the Windward Islands. Scattered showers
and thunderstorms are well inland Venezuela within 180 nm east of
the wave axis.
A western Caribbean tropical has wave moved inland Central America
near 87W south of south of 19N. It is moving westward near 20 kt.
An upper level low near the Yucatan Peninsula is helping to sustain
scattered moderate to isolated strong convection east of the
northern portion of the wave from along the eastern coast of
Honduras north to 19N between the wave and 83W. For future
information on this wave, please see the eastern Pacific Tropical
Weather Discussion (TWDEP).
...MONSOON TROUGH/ITCZ...
The monsoon trough axis enters the Atlantic ocean near 19N16W,
and continues southwestward to 06N25W and westward to 07N35W to
07N41W and to 06N44W, where it transitions to the ITCZ to the
coast of South America near 03N51W. Scattered moderate convection
is within 180 nm south of the trough between 30W-35W, and
within 120 nm north of the trough between 38W-41W.
...GULF OF AMERICA...
High pressure ridging stretches westward from the western
Atlantic to across Florida and to the central Gulf, reinforced by
a 1016 mb high in the eastern Gulf. The pressure gradient between
the ridge and the relatively lower pressures over Texas and
northeastern Mexico has induced moderate to fresh southeast
winds west of about 88W along with seas of 3 to 6 ft. Elsewhere,
light to gentle winds prevail along with seas of 2 to 4 ft.
Scattered moderate to isolated strong convection is just inland
the coast of Mexico from 20N to 26N supported mainly by a mid-
level low feature and a nearby surface trough. Scattered showers
and a few thunderstorms are over extreme southeast Texas.
For the forecast, the high pressure will change little through
much of the week. The pressure gradient between the high pressure
and relatively lower pressures over Texas and northeastern Mexico
will maintain mostly fresh southerly winds over the western and
central Gulf through late Mon night before diminishing to gentle
to moderate speeds. Slight to moderate seas will be with these
winds. Light winds along with slight seas will be over the eastern
Gulf through Thu night as a new high center becomes situated over
the central Gulf.
...CARIBBEAN SEA...
Please refer to the Tropical Waves section above for convection
across the basin.
Broad high pressure is north of the basin over central Atlantic.
The pressure gradient between the high pressure and lower
pressures in northern South America will continue to generally
allow for fresh to strong trade winds across the central
Caribbean and the western Caribbean south of 19N through Mon.
Seas over the south-central basin waters are 7 to 11 ft as
confirmed by recent satellite altimeter passes and a few buoy
observations. Seas are 4 to 6 ft south of 19N west of 80W.
Moderate to fresh trade winds are elsewhere along with seas
of 5 to 7 ft, except for gentle to moderate east to southeast
winds and seas of 3 to 4 ft over the waters south of Cuba to
near 19N.
An area of scattered to numerous moderate to strong convection
is confined to the southwestern section of the sea south of 12N
and west of 78W to inland Panama, primarily due to the eastern
segment of the East Pacific monsoon trough that reaches into that
part of the basin.
For the forecast, the high pressure will prevail north of the
area into next week. The pressure gradient between the high
pressure and lower pressures in northern South America will
support fresh to strong trade winds and moderate to rough seas in
the central Caribbean through the forecast period. The trade winds
are expected to increase to near gale force across the central
portion of the basin over a large area south of 15N, including
along the coast of Colombia and in the Gulf of Venezuela starting
Mon night through Tue night as Atlantic high pressure shifts
southeastward. Seas are expected to build to around 13 ft with
these winds. Pulsing fresh to strong winds and moderate to rough
seas are expected in the Gulf of Honduras nightly well into the
upcoming week. Moderate to fresh winds are expected over much of
the remainder of the Caribbean through the middle portion of next
week. A tropical wave currently in the eastern Caribbean near 65W
will move across the rest of the eastern Caribbean this morning,
and across the rest of the basin through late Wed. Scattered
showers and thunderstorms are expected mainly east of the wave.
A tropical wave has moved inland Central America, with trailing
scattered moderate to isolated strong convection along the coasts
of eastern Honduras and northeastern Nicaragua, and extending
offshore to near 81W.
...ATLANTIC OCEAN...
Broad high pressure that is anchored by a 1022 high center at 28N53W
covers the area north of about 19N. The associated ridge axis near
26N stretches west-southwestward along 25N/26N to South Florida and
the Straits of Florida. The related pressure gradient is generally
supporting moderate to fresh trade winds and moderate seas across
most of the Atlantic south of about 22N as indicated by overnight
satellite scatterometer data. Gentle to moderate anticyclonic winds
are north of 22N along with seas of 3 to 5 ft in southeast swell
west of 55W, except mixed with northwest swell north of 27N between
55W and 74W, and primarily in northwest swell east of 55W. In the
eastern part of the area, a stationary front is from 32N30W to near
31N39W. No convection is present with this feature. A trough to its
southwest is analyzed from near 31N29W to 28N35W and to 27N39W.
Isolated mostly light showers are possible near this trough.
Upper-level jet dynamics along the southeastern periphery of a broad
upper trough that is along the U.S. east coast are sustaining an
area of scattered showers and thunderstorms north of 28N between 70W
and 78W. A broad mid to upper-level low has helped to induce an area
of multilayer clouds with embedded patches of rain and scattered
showers over the waters northeast of the Lesser Antilles, roughly
from 17N to 27N between 50W and 58W.
For the forecast west of 55W, the weak ridge along 25N/26N will
shift slightly south today, and change little through Thu night as
surface troughing lingers near and offshore Florida. Moderate to
fresh trade winds south of 24N will pulse to strong speeds between
the Turks and Caicos and Hispaniola through the forecast period.
$$
Aguirre
Active Tropical Systems
- Mon, 22 Jun 2026 17:04:05 +0000: There are no tropical cyclones at this time. - NHC Atlantic
No tropical cyclones as of Sun, 21 Jun 2026 11:10:16 GMT - Sun, 21 Jun 2026 05:04:05 +0000: Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook - NHC Atlantic
000
ABNT20 KNHC 210503
TWOAT
Tropical Weather Outlook
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
200 AM EDT Sun Jun 21 2026
For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America:
Tropical cyclone formation is not expected during the next 7 days.
$$
Forecaster Beven
Scheduled Reconnaissance Flight Plans
- Sat, 20 Jun 2026 13:59:52 +0000: Weather Reconnaissance Flights Plan of the Day - Weather Reconnaissance Flights Plan of the Day
000
NOUS42 KNHC 201359
REPRPD
WEATHER RECONNAISSANCE FLIGHTS
CARCAH, NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER, MIAMI, FL.
1000 AM EDT SAT 20 JUNE 2026
SUBJECT: TROPICAL CYCLONE PLAN OF THE DAY (TCPOD)
VALID 21/1100Z TO 22/1100Z JUNE 2026
TCPOD NUMBER.....26-020
I. ATLANTIC REQUIREMENTS
1. NEGATIVE RECONNAISSANCE REQUIREMENTS.
2. OUTLOOK FOR SUCCEEDING DAY.....NEGATIVE.
II. PACIFIC REQUIREMENTS
1. NEGATIVE RECONNAISSANCE REQUIREMENTS.
2. OUTLOOK FOR SUCCEEDING DAY.....NEGATIVE.
$$
KAL
NNNN
Marine Weather Discussion
- Mon, 17 May 2021 15:22:40 +0000: NHC Marine Weather Discussion - NHC Marine Weather Discussion
000
AGXX40 KNHC 171522
MIMATS
Marine Weather Discussion
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
1122 AM EDT Mon May 17 2021
Marine Weather Discussion for the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea,
and Tropical North Atlantic from 07N to 19N between 55W and 64W
and the Southwest North Atlantic including the Bahamas
This is the last Marine Weather Discussion issued by the National
Hurricane Center. For marine information, please see the Tropical
Weather Discussion at: hurricanes.gov.
...GULF OF MEXICO...
High pressure along the middle Atlantic coasts extending SW to
the NE Gulf will remain generally stationary throughout the
week. This will support moderate to fresh E to SE winds over the
basin through Tue. Winds will increase to fresh to strong late
Tue through Fri as low pressure deepens across the Southern
Plains.
...CARIBBEAN SEA AND TROPICAL N ATLANTIC FROM 07N TO 19N BETWEEN
55W AND 64W...
A ridge NE of the Caribbean Sea will shift eastward and weaken,
diminishing winds and seas modestly through Wed. Trade winds
will increase basin wide Wed night through Fri night as high
pressure builds across the western Atlantic.
...SW N ATLANTIC INCLUDING THE BAHAMAS...
A weakening frontal boundary from 25N65W to the central Bahamas
will drift SE and dissipate through late Tue. Its remnants will
drift N along 23N-24N. The pressure gradient between high
pressure off of Hatteras and the frontal boundary will support
an area of fresh to strong easterly winds N of 23N and W of 68W
with seas to 11 ft E of the Bahamas late Tue through Fri.
$$
.WARNINGS...Any changes impacting coastal NWS offices will be
coordinated through AWIPS II Collaboration Chat, or by
telephone:
.GULF OF MEXICO...
None.
.CARIBBEAN SEA AND TROPICAL N ATLANTIC FROM 07N TO 19N BETWEEN
55W AND 64W...
None.
.SW N ATLANTIC INCLUDING THE BAHAMAS...
None.
$$
*For detailed zone descriptions, please visit:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/abouttafbprod.shtml#OWF
Note: gridded marine forecasts are available in the National
Digital Forecast Database (NDFD) at:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/marine/grids.php
For additional information, please visit:
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/marine
$$
.Forecaster GR. National Hurricane Center.
Atlantic Tropical Monthly Summary
- Thu, 01 May 2025 13:04:51 +0000: Atlantic Monthly Tropical Weather Summary - Atlantic Monthly Tropical Weather Summary
000<br />ABNT30 KNHC 011304<br />TWSAT <br /><br />Monthly Tropical Weather Summary<br />NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL<br />900 AM EDT Thu May 1 2025<br /><br />This is the last National Hurricane Center (NHC) Tropical Weather <br />Summary (TWS) text product that will be issued for the Atlantic <br />basin. The tropical cyclone statistics from the TWS will be found <br />on hurricanes.gov beginning with the 2025 hurricane season. This <br />change will allow for more frequent updates to the statistics and <br />the addition of graphics and links to supporting information that <br />this text only format cannot support. An account of tropical <br />cyclone names, classification (i.e., tropical depression, tropical <br />storm, or hurricane), and maximum sustained wind speed will be found <br />on hurricanes.gov at this url beginning around July 1: <br /><br />https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/data/tcr/index.php?basin=atl<br /><br />A sample webpage is provided here, with the "2023 Atlantic Summary <br />Table (PDF)" example linked below the Tropical Cyclone Reports <br />(TCRs):<br /><br />https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/data/tcr/index.php?season=2023&basin=atl <br /><br />This information will be updated no less frequently than monthly <br />during the hurricane season and will be updated after the season's <br />TCRs are completed to document the official record of the season's <br />tropical cyclone activity. Previously, the statistics and data in <br />the TWS were based on real-time operational assessments and were <br />not updated when the season's TCRs were complete. The new <br />web-based format allows the information to be updated once the <br />post-analysis for the season is complete. <br /><br />For more information, see Service Change Notice 25-22: Migration of <br />the Tropical Weather Summary Information from Text Product Format to <br />hurricanes.gov:<br /><br />https://www.weather.gov/media/notification/pdf_2025/scn25-<br />22_moving_info_from_tws_to_hurricanes.gov.pdf


