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Hot Sun and Afternoon Storms

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Wednesday features plenty of hot sun and mainly afternoon showers and storms on a brisk and gusty breeze.  Expect an elevated risk of dangerous rip currents at the Gulf beaches.  Highs on Wednesday will be in the mid-90s in the East Coast metro area and the low 90s along the Gulf Coast and the Keys.

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Thursday will be mostly sunny with a few showers and storms in spots.  The gusty breeze continues along the Gulf Coast.  Thursday’s highs will be mostly in the low 90s, but a few suburban locations could reach the mid-90s.

Friday will feature a mix of hot sun and periods of showers and storms.  Friday’s highs will be mostly in the mid-90s in the East Coast metro area and in the low 90s along the Gulf Coast and in the Keys.

Faith Based Events

Saturday will be mostly sunny with mainly afternoon showers and storms.  Saturday’s highs will be in the low 90s.

Sunday’s forecast calls for a summertime mix of sun, clouds, showers, and some storms.  Highs on Sunday will be in the low 90s.

In the tropics, Tropical Storm Debby is meandering off the coast of Georgia and South Carolina, dropping extreme amounts of rain on the region.  At 8 pm  Tuesday, Debby was about 30 miles southeast of Savannah and 85 miles south-southwest of Charleston.  Maximum sustained winds were 40 miles per hour, and Debby was creeping to the east-northeast at 3 miles per hour.  Rainfall from Debby could exceed 20 inches by Friday, which would result in devastating flooding to eastern portions of Georgia and the Carolinas.   Debby is then forecast to move quickly up the eastern seaboard, bringing heavy rain from the Carolinas to eastern Canada on Friday and Saturday.

Elsewhere, the wave that’s now in the central Caribbean has a low chance of becoming a depression during the next couple of days, but conditions will be more conducive to development once it reaches the western Caribbean and eventually the southern Gulf of Mexico.


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Donna Thomas has studied hurricanes for two decades. She holds a PhD in history when her experience with Hurricane Andrew ultimately led her to earn a degree in broadcast meteorology from Mississippi State University. Donna spent 15 years at WFOR-TV (CBS4 in Miami-Fort Lauderdale), where she worked as a weather producer with hurricane experts Bryan Norcross and David Bernard. She also produced hurricane specials and weather-related features and news coverage, as well as serving as pool TV producer at the National Hurricane Center during the 2004 and 2005 seasons. Donna also served as a researcher on NOAA's Atlantic Hurricane Database Reanalysis Project. Donna specializes in Florida's hurricane history.