Danny still doesn't look the greatest, though to me this isn't a surprise, as I've always felt a minimal hurricane was the highest potential max intensity for this thing all along. The center of circulation still has not seen convection wrap around it, and it wouldn't be a shock to see it reform farther east where the convection is deeper, which would mean the risk for an official landfall is much less. Even with the track I had, which was near Hatteras to Cape Cod, this was not really gonna be a big deal where most people live in the I-95 corridor, as rain from interacting with the incoming cool front was really the biggest "threat". However, it does look like the track I had will need to be nudged a bit to the east, and at this point, any landfall is probably relegated to around Nantucket and that's about it. All in all, this will be a storm that got talked about quite a bit by some, but will go down as something that in the grand scheme of things is quite insignificant.
But fear not all you tropical enthusiasts, as the next system may be forming in the eastern Atlantic, as we do have a wave that has flared up nicely, and is in an evnvironment that right now isn't too bad, so in the next few days, we could have Erika on the map. My guess right now is that this will have a hard time ever being a threat to the U.S, given that we will likely have at least one weak upper low dancing underneath the Atlantic ridge, which will probbaly act to guid this storm north of the Lesser Antilles, and then it would probably get steered back out to sea given the strong upper trough headed into the eastern U.S. next week, which probably will split and send a piece tailing into the Southeast. But obviously we're talking a long way out here, and plenty of time to watch this one.
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