Tropical Storm Expected To Form Later Today
WATCHING THE GULF: Alabama’s weather over the next five days will be determined by tropical developments in the northern Gulf of Mexico. What is now “Potential Tropical Cyclone Two” should become a tropical depression by midday, and Tropical Storm Barry tonight.
The system is currently about 125 miles south of the Mississippi coast, and is drifting to the west. A northward turn is likely tomorrow, and the system is forecast by NHC to come into the Louisiana coast as a minimal hurricane Saturday morning.
Don’t focus on the center line; tropical rain bands will extend out to the east for a few hundred miles. And, until the system gets a well defined center and becomes better organized, there will still be some uncertainty in the forecast movement and intensity. We will still seeing considerable model spread, so watch for forecast changes. But, one way or another this will impact Alabama’s weather in a pretty big way through early next week.
A Storm Surge Watch is in effect from the mouth of the Pearl River to Intracoastal City. A Hurricane Watch is in effect from the mouth of the Mississippi River to Cameron, Louisiana. And, a Tropical Storm Watch is in effect from the mouth of the Mississippi River northward to the Mouth of the Pearl River.
Flash flood watches are in effect for Washington, Mobile, and Baldwin counties in Alabama, Escambia and Santa Rosa counties in Florida, and areas west through South Mississippi and Southeast Louisiana.
GULF COAST IMPACT: The tropical system will bring occasional tropical downpours to the Central Gulf Coast (Fort Morgan, Gulf Shores, Pensacola Beach, Destin, Panama City Beach) today, tomorrow, and over the weekend. There will be breaks in the rain, and the sun will break out at times. Dangerous rip currents are likely, and expect red or double red flags through the weekend. An isolated brief waterspout or tornado is possible as well, especially west of Pensacola tomorrow and Saturday.
Rain amounts of 2-4 inches are likely from Dauphin Island to Gulf Shores, Pensacola Beach, Destin, and Panama City Beach. For the Mississippi coast, 4-6 inches are expected, and some parts of Southeast Louisiana could see over 10 inches of rain due to the slow motion of the tropical system. Flooding is a real concern for New Orleans and Baton Rouge.
The weather on the coast will improve early next week as Barry moves inland and away from the region.
INLAND IMPACT: In Alabama, today will be hot and muggy with developing showers and storms this afternoon and tonight. The high will be in the low 90s, and a heat advisory is in effect again for the northwest part of the state.
Showers and storms become more numerous tomorrow and over the weekend as tropical moisture deepens, and Barry passes just to the west. Our state will be on the wet, east side of the system, so expect occasional tropical downpours on these three days. Highs drop into the upper 80s tomorrow, mid 80s Saturday, and some communities could hold in the 70s all day Sunday due to clouds and showers.
The heaviest rain should be on the western side of the state, closer to the center of the tropical system as it moves northward. Don’t be surprised if the QPF forecast from WPC changes again later today and tonight as forecast confidence grows… I would not be surprised if some places in Alabama see 3-4 inches of rain by Monday, especially on the western side of the state.
We note SPC has parts of West and Southwest Alabama in a “marginal risk” (level 1/5) for Saturday… a low end tornado threat could develop there as Barry moves inland.
A deep layer of tropical moisture will likely linger through early next week, meaning occasional showers and storms will be likely Monday and Tuesday. The weather will trend drier toward the end of the week… See the Weather Xtreme video for maps, graphics, and more details.
ON THIS DATE IN 1936: From July 5-17, temperatures exceeding 111 degrees in Manitoba and Ontario claimed 1,180 lives (mostly the elderly and infants) during the most prolonged, deadliest heat wave on record. Four hundred of these deaths were caused by people who drowned seeking refuge from the heat. In fact, the heat was so intense that steel rail lines and bridge girders twisted, sidewalks buckled, crops wilted and fruit baked on trees. Some record temperatures include; 112 degrees at St. Albans and Emerson, Manitoba, 111 at Brandon, Manitoba, 108 at Atikokan, Ontario, and Winnipeg, Manitoba.
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