Forecasts Watching Storm Off S.C. Coast
Sunday, June 29, 2014 at 9:54PM
Editor

A low pressure weather system off the coast of Florida could develop into a tropical storm later this week and take a turn toward the Carolinas, according to a National Weather Service forecaster.

The National Hurricane Center issued a forecast Sunday, saying that the system has a 60 percent chance of developing into a tropical storm in the next 48 hours. There's an 80 percent chance the system will become a tropical storm by Friday, the center said in a nationally issued forecast.

The storm, according to the forecast, is expected to become more defined late Tuesday as it travels over Eastern Florida coastal waters. Tropical storms have sustained winds of 39 mph to 73 mph, and can bring several inches of rain.

The weather system is currently about 230 miles east of St. Augustine, Fla. Julie Packett, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Charleston, said the system is currently traveling south west toward the tip of Florida but that it's expected to take a northerly turn toward the Carolinas later this week.

Packett said current weather models are forecasting the storm will travel north parallel to the South Carolina coast. As of Sunday, the system was not predicted to make landfall in South Carolina, she said.

"Of course a lot can change over the next couple days," Packett said. "It's something to definitely keep a close eye on."

Article originally appeared on The Anderson Observer (http://andersonobserver.squarespace.com/).
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