Most of the central USA will enjoy warm, dry weather, AccuWeather said. the rain chance sits at around 10-20 (isolated). Some showers and thunderstorms from a separate weather system are possible in the Northwest and northern Rockies through the weekend. We could see a few sea breeze pop ups through the next couple of days. Rain from the system will invade the mid-Atlantic and Northeast through the weekend, and Monday, Memorial Day, looks to be the wettest day, AccuWeather said. The office said the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission is pre-positioning the agency's high-water vehicles for rapid deployment if needed. Rainfall accumulations along the southern Gulf Coast and South Texas. The Florida governor's office said it is monitoring the system and encouraged Floridians to prepare "for significant rain and possible flooding." For local details and impacts, please contact your State Climatologist or Regional. This month, many locations in the Florida peninsula have had one of their top 10 wettest Mays on record, according to the Southeast Regional Climate Center. All four days will see substantial amounts." He warned that "a disorganized, slow-moving weak tropical low, depression or low-end storm can cause catastrophic flooding."Īs much as 7 inches of rain is possible in south Florida, where some areas had more than 17 inches of rain last weekend, the National Weather Service said. The cool season lasts for 3.0 months, from December 3 to March 2, with an average daily high temperature below 67☏. The hottest month of the year in Gulf Breeze is July, with an average high of 89☏ and low of 76☏. meteorologist Ryan Maue said to "prepare for a lot of rainfall all along the Gulf Coast beaches this weekend. The hot season lasts for 4.2 months, from May 23 to September 28, with an average daily high temperature above 84☏. Heavy rainfall is possible in western Cuba, the Cayman Islands and much of Florida during the next several days.ĪccuWeather meteorologist Dan Kottlowski said, "Regardless of tropical or non-tropical development, this system will continue to produce heavy rainfall that will lead to flooding over parts of Florida and the Deep South and southeastern U.S. The projected paths of the system range from Louisiana to the west coast of Florida. The hurricane center expects the system, east of the Yucatan Peninsula in the Caribbean Sea, to slowly move north into the Gulf of Mexico and approach land by late Saturday. There's a 60% chance the system will become a tropical depression this weekend over the eastern or central Gulf of Mexico, the National Hurricane Center said Wednesday. If the depression's wind speeds reach 39 mph, it would become the season's first named storm: Alberto. The unofficial kickoff to summer could have an unwelcome visitor this weekend.įor folks along the Gulf Coast and in the Southeast, a damp and dreary Memorial Day weekend is forecast, thanks to a slow-moving weather system. Watch Video: Memorial Day grilling dos and don'ts Observed at 18:00, Saturday 29 July BBC Weather in association with MeteoGroup All times are CDT (America/Chicago, GMT -0500) unless otherwise stated.
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