For the next few days at least, the Atlantic waters will continue to be void of any important tropical activity. There are only four tropical waves and an upper trough of low pressure worth taking a look at.
A new tropical wave is showing up along 16 west and south of 15 north and tracking to the west at 16 knots. All the nearby convection with this wave is in the ITCZ.
The next tropical wave is along 51 west and south of 20 north, rapidly moving west at 25 knots. This tropical wave is mostly devoid of deep convection.
A third tropical wave is along 59 west, south of 10 north, moving west around 12 knots. While there is some scattered convection associated with this wave, there remains nothing organized in the way of convection.
The forth tropical wave is in the western Caribbean along 81 west, south of 17 north, drifting west around 5 knots. It is enhancing convection across parts of Central America.
An upper trough of low pressure moving westward into the Bay of Campeche is causing showers and thunderstorms across the Yucatan Peninsula and the northwestern Caribbean. It will interact with the tropical wave currently along 81 west to produce heavy showers and thunderstorms across the northwestern Caribbean, the Yucatan Peninsula and parts of Central America over the next day or two.