Tropical Storm Colin – the third named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season – is predicted to drench components of South and North Carolina with heavy rainfall and doable flash flooding over Fourth of July weekend.
Tropical storm warnings have been issued Saturday for components of the South and North Carolina coasts. Tropical storm circumstances may start Saturday morning in South Carolina earlier than spreading to North Carolina later Saturday via Sunday because the storm strikes northeast alongside the shore, the Nationwide Hurricane heart stated.
Each coastal South and North Carolina will probably see sturdy winds, heavy rainfall of as much as 4 inches and localized areas of flash flooding via Sunday morning.
“There shall be tough surf, harmful rip currents and areas of coastal erosion within the neighborhood of the storm this weekend,” AccuWeather meteorologist Adam Douty forecast.
As of 11 a.m. Saturday, Colin was situated about 5 miles west of Myrtle Seaside, South Carolina, with most sustained winds of about 40 mph. The storm was shifting northeast at 7 mph and is predicted to dissipate over the western Atlantic on Monday, the hurricane heart stated.
TROPICAL STORM BONNIE:Bonnie varieties in Caribbean, anticipated to hit Central America later Friday
In the meantime, Tropical Storm Bonnie swept via components of Nicaragua on Saturday, threatening flooding and heavy rain of as much as 8 inches. Mudslides are additionally anticipated “to proceed over parts of Nicaragua and Costa Rica” all through Saturday, based on the hurricane heart.
The storm made landfall Friday on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast with most sustained winds of fifty mph earlier than it started shifting westward at 16 mph, headed towards Costa Rica. Bonnie is predicted to maneuver into the Pacific on Saturday earlier than gaining energy and certain reaching hurricane pressure by Monday.
Contributing: The Related Press
Contact Information Now Reporter Christine Fernando at [email protected] or observe her on Twitter at @christinetfern.