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Post by Maxx on Sept 6, 2020 10:20:46 GMT -6
Four systems in the Atlantic Ocean have the National Hurricane Center’s attention, but none of them are the reason Labor Day could be damp. ▪ Disturbance No. 1: As of the Sunday 8 a.m. update, the NHC puts this disturbance’s chance of forming at 90% in the next two days or five days. It’s midway between the west coast of Africa and the Leeward Islands and will continue to move westward or west-northwestward. This could became Tropical Depression Paulette late Sunday or early around Labor Day when the system reaches the central tropical Atlantic. ▪ Disturbance No. 2: This system has an 80% chance of developing in the next five days, NHC projects. Folks in the Cabo Verde Islands should expect “gusty winds and locally heavy rainfall” Monday and Tuesday. www.yahoo.com/news/hurricane-center-watching-3-systems-130121084.html
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Post by Belle on Sept 12, 2020 7:12:42 GMT -6
And here's another one! The next named storm of this record-breaking hurricane season is developing near southern Florida (CNN)Yet another tropical system is brewing in this extremely active Atlantic hurricane season, and this one is close to home. Tropical Depression Nineteen formed Friday afternoon less than 100 miles east-southeast of Miami, Florida, according to the National Hurricane Center. The system is expected to move across southern Florida tonight and early Saturday before emerging in the Gulf of Mexico later in the day. The current forecast from NHC is for the system to become a tropical storm over the weekend in the Gulf, but they don't rule out the possibility of it happening tonight before it moves into Florida. www.cnn.com/2020/09/11/weather/tropical-forecast-florida-storm-hurricane/index.html
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Post by VisionAri on Sept 12, 2020 8:13:59 GMT -6
And here's another one! The next named storm of this record-breaking hurricane season is developing near southern Florida (CNN)Yet another tropical system is brewing in this extremely active Atlantic hurricane season, and this one is close to home. Tropical Depression Nineteen formed Friday afternoon less than 100 miles east-southeast of Miami, Florida, according to the National Hurricane Center. The system is expected to move across southern Florida tonight and early Saturday before emerging in the Gulf of Mexico later in the day. The current forecast from NHC is for the system to become a tropical storm over the weekend in the Gulf, but they don't rule out the possibility of it happening tonight before it moves into Florida. www.cnn.com/2020/09/11/weather/tropical-forecast-florida-storm-hurricane/index.htmlIf it continues to develop, it will become Tropical Storm Rene (there are only 21 names; no Q, U, X, Y or Z This has been such a bad year that with more than two months left in hurricane season, we're likely to run out of names for only the second time since they started naming storms in 1953.
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