Home Weather Sun and Storms Again, Watching the Tropics

Sun and Storms Again, Watching the Tropics

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Tuesday features plenty of hot sun, some clouds at times, and a few showers and storms, mostly in the afternoon and early evening.  Highs on Tuesday will be in the low-90s right at the coasts and in the Keys, while the rest of South Florida will reach the mid-90s.  But it will feel about 10 degrees hotter, so stay hydrated and out of the sun.

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Wednesday will bring a mix of sun, clouds, and storms to the East Coast metro area, while the Gulf Coast will see lots of sun in the morning and clouds, showers, and storms in the afternoon.  Wednesday’s highs will be in the low-90s right at the coasts and in the Keys, while everyone else will see highs in the mid-90s.

Thursday will feature sun and a few storms in spots during the morning.  Showers will move in during the afternoon and hang around into the evening.  Thursday’s highs will be mostly in the low 90s, with a few suburban locations topping out in the mid-90s.

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Friday will see hot sun with plenty of clouds, showers, and storms.  Friday’s highs will be in the low-90s.

Saturday’s forecast calls for an August mix of sun, showers, and storms.  Highs on Saturday will be in the low-90s.

In the tropics, what was Potential Tropical Cyclone # 5 is now Tropical Storm Ernesto — and it’s bringing heavy rain and tropical storm force winds to the Leeward Islands.  At 5 pm Monday, TS Ernesto had maximum sustained winds of 40 miles per hour and zooming west-northwest at 28 miles per hour.
Tropical storm warnings are in effect for the lesser Antilles from Anguilla southward to Guadeloupe and for Puerto Rico and the U.S. and British Virgin Islands.  This system is forecast to reach hurricane strength by Thursday morning while remaining well east of the Bahamas and the U.S. coast.  It could be a threat to Bermuda late on Friday through Saturday.
Elsewhere in the tropical Atlantic, it’s quiet.

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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.