BREAK IT DN.OW TONY: IT MADE LANDFALL NEAR ST. VINCENT’S ISLAND, FLORIDAA, SHORT TIME AGO. THE FIRST BAND FROM THE STORM SYSTEM IS APPROACHING INTERSTATE 75 AND OTHER BANDS WLIL APPEAR LATER. HERE IS THE SECOND AND HERE IS THE THIRD ON THE OTHER SIDE OF MINDY. FORECAST CONE TAKES IT STJU NORTH OF JACKSONVILLE. WE HAVE TROPICAL STORM WARNINGS IN EFFECT. IT IS HEADED THROUGH JACKSONVILLE BY MIDMORNING AND EAT WILL PULL IN MORE MOISTURE -- BY MIDMORNING AND IT IS GOING TO PULL INOR ME MOISTEUR. WE HAVE HAD HEAVY DOWNPOURS NEAR NEW SMYRNA BEACH AND WE HAVE FLOOD ADVISORIES IN EFFECT FOR SAMSULA, NEW SMYRNA BEACH,ND A NEAR ORLANDO WE HAVE HAD OVER 7 INCHES OF RAIN.
Mindy, now a tropical depression, dumps rain over Georgia
Rain was pouring down on southeast Georgia and coastal South Carolina as Mindy, now a tropical depression, made its way across the state state early Thursday morning.The storm made landfall in St. Vincent Island, on Wednesday night. Mindy was expected to cause as much as 6 inches of rainfall across the Florida Panhandle and portions of southern Georgia and South Carolina through Thursday morning, the National Hurricane Center said. Scattered flash, urban, and small-stream floods are possible.The storm on Thursday morning was about 80 miles south southeast of Valdosta, Georgia, and moving northeast at 20 mph with maximum sustained winds of 35 mph, forecasters said. A slower east-northeastward motion is forecast Thursday night through Saturday. The center of Mindy is expected to move across southeastern Georgia Thursday morning, and over the western Atlantic by later in the day. Little change in strength is forecast through Thursday night. Gradual weakening is expected on Friday and Mindy is forecast to become a remnant low by Saturday.The tropical storm warning in effect from Mexico Beach, Florida, to the Steinhatchee River have been canceled. That area is about 300 miles east of southern Louisiana, where Hurricane Ida made landfall late last month. The region is still recovering from the deadly and destructive Category 4 storm. Mindy is the 13th-named storm of what has been another busy Atlantic hurricane season. According to a tweet from Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach, the average date for the 13th-named storm from 1991-2020 was Oct. 24.
Rain was pouring down on southeast Georgia and coastal South Carolina as Mindy, now a tropical depression, made its way across the state state early Thursday morning.
The storm made landfall in St. Vincent Island, on Wednesday night. Mindy was expected to cause as much as 6 inches of rainfall across the Florida Panhandle and portions of southern Georgia and South Carolina through Thursday morning, the National Hurricane Center said. Scattered flash, urban, and small-stream floods are possible.
The storm on Thursday morning was about 80 miles south southeast of Valdosta, Georgia, and moving northeast at 20 mph with maximum sustained winds of 35 mph, forecasters said.
A slower east-northeastward motion is forecast Thursday night through Saturday. The center of Mindy is expected to move across southeastern Georgia Thursday morning, and over the western Atlantic by later in the day. Little change in strength is forecast through Thursday night. Gradual weakening is expected on Friday and Mindy is forecast to become a remnant low by Saturday.
The tropical storm warning in effect from Mexico Beach, Florida, to the Steinhatchee River have been canceled. That area is about 300 miles east of southern Louisiana, where Hurricane Ida made landfall late last month. The region is still recovering from the deadly and destructive Category 4 storm.
Mindy is the 13th-named storm of what has been another busy Atlantic hurricane season. According to a tweet from Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach, the average date for the 13th-named storm from 1991-2020 was Oct. 24.