NHC: Potential tropical cyclone develops over Bahamas
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Saturday, Sep 27 update from the National Hurricane Center: Latest on the Potential Tropical Cyclone
The National Hurricane Center's 2 a.m. Saturday advisory reported that the potential tropical cyclone is in the Atlantic Ocean, 135 miles northwest of the Eastern Tip of Cuba and 145 miles south of the Central Bahamas. Packing maximum sustained winds of 35 mph, it is tracking northwest at 8 mph.
We are mostly dry across central Alabama tonight. Some heavy rain is falling in far southeast central Alabama.
Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine is forecast to strengthen into Imelda as it moves toward the Carolinas, bringing threats of strong winds, heavy rainfall and coastal flooding early next week. Forecasters warn that impacts could include power outages,
1hon MSN
Tropical system closing in on the Southeast could unleash dangerous flood threat early next week
A tropical system brewing near the Bahamas could bring flooding rain, coastal surge, damaging winds and dangerous surf to the Southeast US as early as Monday, leaving very little time for people to prepare.
Strengthening Humberto and developing Imelda staying just off our coast will have some coastal impacts of large swells next week.
Periods of showers and thunderstorms are expected as a cold front stalls across the eastern portions of the Carolinas, a Robeson County Administration/Government said, with one to two inches of rain forecast for across the area and up to three inches possible locally in some areas between Friday afternoon and Sunday evening.
Saturday, Sep 27 update: Latest on the Potential Tropical Cyclone from the National Hurricane Center
The National Hurricane Center's 5 a.m. Saturday advisory reported that the potential tropical cyclone is in the Atlantic Ocean, 145 miles northwest of the Eastern Tip of Cuba and 145 miles south of the Central Bahamas. The system, with maximum sustained winds of 35 mph, is moving to the northwest at 9 mph.
Two tropical cyclones are barreling through the Atlantic on a potential collision course — and if they clash, a freak weather event merging them into one monster storm could wreak havoc along the East Coast.