Tropical Storms

Tropical Storm Flossie to Cross Hawaii Monday

Magikalspirit's picture

accuweather.com-Kristina Pydynowski -July 28, 2013

Dangerous surf, flooding rain and potentially damaging winds are in store for Hawaii with the arrival of Tropical Storm Flossie.

Tropical Storm Flossie is expected to pass over or in between the northern tip of the Big Island and southern Maui Island on Monday.

After undergoing some weakening, Flossie will either be a minimal tropical storm or a depression at that time.

Not since Hurricane Iniki from 1992 has a hurricane or tropical storm reached Hawaii.

Read More: http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/tropical-storm-flossie-hawaii-2/15870096

 

 

Tropical Storm Flossie Sets Sights on Hawaii

Magikalspirit's picture
AccuWeather-By Kristina Pydynowski, Senior Meteorologist

 

Tropical Storm Flossie will remain on a path to Hawaii through next week.

Flossie is more than a thousand miles away from land, but that distance will shrink through early next week as the tropical storm remains on a west-northwest track toward Hawaii.

Over the warm waters of the eastern Pacific Ocean, Flossie took shape early Thursday morning.

The arrival of Flossie in Hawaii is anticipated around Monday night or Tuesday

Read More: http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/tropical-storm-flossie-hawaii/15729610

TD 2 Crossing the Yucatan, Bringing Heavy Rains

Desert Gypsy's picture

Wunderground.com- 6/18/13, Dr. Jeff Masters

 

Tropical Depression Two is slowly spinning west-northwest across Belize after making landfall late Monday afternoon in southern Belize. The storm is bringing heavy rain to Belize, Northern Guatemala, and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, as seen on Belize radar and satellite loops. The center of TD 2 will remain over land all day Tuesday, but TD 2's west-northwest track may be able to bring the storm over the Gulf of Mexico's southern Bay of Campeche on Wednesday--if the storm hasn't dissipated by then. The Bay of Campeche is a region where the topography aids the spin-up of tropical cyclones, and TD 2 may have barely enough time to become Tropical Storm Barry with 40 mph winds before making landfall on Thursday between Veracruz and Tampico. However, the track of the storm may also keep it just inland during the remainder of the week, keeping it from ever getting to tropical storm strength. Heavy rains are the storm's main threat, but a ridge of high pressure over the Gulf of Mexico should keep any of TD 2's rains from reaching the U.S. Observations from an AMSU instrument on a polar orbiting satellite on Monday afternoon found that TD 2 had developed a modest warm core characteristic of a weak tropical storm, and it is possible that NHC will upgrade TD 2 to a tropical storm in post-analysis after the hurricane season is over. Elsewhere in the tropical Atlantic, none of the reliable computer models is showing tropical cyclone development in the next seven days

Subscribe to RSS - Tropical Storms