
T.S. Chantal brings heavy rain to North Carolina, tropical rain expected in the Piedmont Triad
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
Tropical Storm Chantal’s landfall soon, rain in North Carolina
Tropical Storm Chantal will make landfall in South Carolina and head toward the Piedmont Triad. The system is expected to make landfall early Sunday morning. The storm will bring heavy rain and gusty winds to parts of the Carolinas. The National Weather Service has issued a tropical storm warning for parts of North and South Carolina. The NWS has also issued a hurricane warning for portions of South Carolina, Georgia and Virginia, as well as parts of Virginia and Virginia. The tropical storm watch is in effect for much of the eastern half of the U.S. and the northern tip of North Carolina until Monday morning, when it will be replaced by a tropical depression. The hurricane warning is in place for most of the rest of the week, but it could be extended into next week if the storm lingers long enough to affect the East Coast and parts of New York and New England. For more information on how to prepare for the storm, visit CNN.com/Heroes and CNN iReport.
THIS SYSTEM WILL BE MAKING LANDFALL. SO ONLY ABOUT 50 MILES JUST OFF THE COAST OF SOUTH CAROLINA NEAR CHARLESTON RIGHT NOW. AND IT’S GOING TO PUSH IN AND EVENTUALLY MAKE A NORTH NORTHEASTERLY TURN. SO LET’S TAKE A LOOK. YOU CAN SEE THIS IMPRESSIVE INFRARED SATELLITE IMAGERY OF THE SYSTEM THAT HAS ACTUALLY GAINED A LITTLE BIT OF STRENGTH TONIGHT. WE HAVE NOW SEEN THE WINDS CLIMB TO ABOUT 45 FROM 45 TO 50 MILES AN HOUR. AND YOU CAN SEE THE STORM MOVING TO THE NORTH AT ABOUT EIGHT MILES AN HOUR, SUSTAINED WINDS AT 50 MILES AN HOUR RIGHT NOW. AND SO THIS IS PUTTING IT CLOSER TO WILMINGTON AS WELL, ABOUT 100 MILES TO THE SOUTH SOUTHWEST. YOU SEE THAT TURN HERE AS WE SEE THAT TURN, CONTINUE TO MOVE TO THE NORTH AND EAST THROUGHOUT THE AFTERNOON HOURS. TOMORROW, OF COURSE, WE’RE GOING TO GET ALL OF THOSE SHOWERS AND STORM BANDS WRAPPING INLAND AHEAD OF THAT, AND WE EXPECT TO SEE SOME OF THE WORST WEATHER DEVELOPING NOW AND OVERNIGHT FOR FOLKS ALONG OUR BEACHES IN NORTH CAROLINA AND SOUTH CAROLINA. SO FLASH FLOODING CONCERNS ARE GOING TO BE GREATEST. TO THE EAST. WE’VE GOT SOME WAVE HEIGHTS HERE. YOU CAN SEE EIGHT FOOT WAVES NOW APPROACHING AREAS TOWARD WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, CAROLINA BEACH. AND THEN WE HEAD DOWN A LITTLE BIT FARTHER SOUTH TOWARD PAWLEYS ISLAND AREA, NINE FOOT WAVES. SO THIS IS THE ZONE HERE BETWEEN MYRTLE BEACH AND REALLY SAVANNAH, THAT THEY’RE GOING TO SEE SOME OF THE STRONG WAVES. AND WE HAVE CONCERNS FOR BEACH EROSION OF COURSE, BUT IT’S THE COASTAL FLOODING THAT HAS A BIG IMPACT FOR FOLKS THERE. WHETHER IT’S FLASH FLOODING OR FOLKS TRYING TO GET TO AND FROM AND TRAVEL. THIS CAN BE VERY DANGEROUS OVERNIGHT. NOW WE’VE GOT SOME GUSTS OUT THERE, ANYWHERE FROM 39 MILES AN HOUR TO ABOUT 57 MILES AN HOUR POSSIBLE. AND THAT COULD TAKE DOWN SOME TREES AND CAUSE SOME SPOTTY POWER OUTAGES. BUT OVERALL, THE SYSTEM, BECAUSE IT IS SO SHORT LIVED, IS EXPECTED TO HAVE LIMITED IMPACT ALONG THE COAST AND INLAND. MAINLY JUST SHOWERS AND A FEW THUNDERSTORMS. BUT OF COURSE, WHEN WE TALK ABOUT THE SHOWERS THAT MOVE IN, THIS IS TROPICAL RAIN. THIS IS GOING TO HAVE A BIT BETTER OPPORTUNITY TO DROP OUT SOME GOOD SOAKING RAINFALL TOTALS. SO GUSTS OUT THERE STILL LOOKING MILD ANYWHERE FROM 15 TO ABOUT 20 MILES AN HOUR. THAT’S TYPICAL WHEN WE SEE A SHOWER OR STORM ROLL THROUGH. SO WINDS ARE NOT A BIG ISSUE. IT IS GOING TO BE THE HEAVY RAIN THAT COULD CAUSE SOME LOCALIZED FLOODING OR SOME PONDING ON THE ROADWAYS. SOME HYDROPANING CONDITIONS. STILL, WE WANT YOU TO BE CAUTIOUS TOMORROW. THE BIG WINDOW OF TIME FOR SOME OF THE HEAVIEST OF RAIN IN THE EASTERN TRIAD, THREE TO ABOUT 8:00 IN THE EVENING. SO ABOUT A FIVE HOUR WINDOW THERE. WE COULD STILL SEE SOME SCATTERED SHOWERS THAT ARE ALREADY BEGINNING TO PUSH INTO THE EASTERN TRIAD THROUGH OVERNIGHT. AND THAT CONTINUES TO RAMP UP THROUGHOUT THE DAY AGAIN, LATE AFTERNOON, EARLY EVENING. AND HAZARDOUS DRIVING IS THE MAIN FOCUS OF OUR CONCERN. IF YOU HAVE TO DO ANY TRAVELING EAST ON I-40 OR 85, THOSE ARE THE ZONES YOU WANT TO WATCH FOR TOO. SO MAINLY EASTERN. TRY SOME HYDROPLANING CONDITIONS. A LOCALIZED FLOODING RISK, AT LEAST ON THE CURRENT TRACK. RIGHT NOW IT LOOKS LIKE THE WORST OF THE WEATHER STILL REMAINS WELL TO OUR EAST, OUT OVER AREAS LIKE RALEIGH AND HEADING ALONG THE SANDHILLS. SO WE’LL KEEP YOU POSTED AS WE GET YOU THROUGHOUT THE DAY. DOES LOOK LIKE TEMPERATURES WILL HAVE A CHANCE TO WARM IN THE WESTERN AREAS OF THE TRIAD. WINSTON-SALEM. POSSIBLY AS WE GET YOU THERE TO NEAR 84 DEGREES, THOSE FOLKS WILL HAVE MORE CLOUDS AND BETTER ROUNDS OF RAIN THAT’S GOING TO COOL YOU DOWN AND KEEP YOU IN THE UPPER 70S. SO ROUNDS OF SHOWERS, A FEW THUNDERSTORMS POSSIBLE, AND THOSE IMPACT HOURS BEGINNING TO RAMP UP AFTER 11 IN THE MORNING. AND THEN WE SEE THOSE DROPPING OFF AFTER EIGHT AS THE SYSTEM PULLS AWAY. SO HERE’S THE TRACK. YOU CAN SEE IT MOVING TO THE NORTH AND NORTHEAST OVERNIGHT. WE EXPECT THIS TO HAVE SOME BIG IMPACTS FOR FOLKS ALONG THE COAST WITH COASTAL FLOODING, SOME FLASH FLOODING CONCERNS, AND ISOLATED POWER OUTAGES. BUT HERE YOU GO WITH TEMPERATURES. WE’RE ALREADY BEGINNING TO SEE THE CLOUDS MOVE IN. THIS WILL KEEP TEMPERATURES PRETTY MILD THROUGH EARLY MORNING. LOW 70S, SCATTERED SHOWERS POPPING UP OVER AREAS OF RANDOLPH COUNTY RIGHT NOW FOR YOU, AND WE’LL BEGIN TO SEE SOME HEAVIER DOWNPOURS POSSIBLE. SO WIDER VIEW SHOWS YOU THAT WATER VAPOR IMAGERY. WE’VE GOT A LOT TO WORK WITH IN THAT TROPICAL MOISTURE JUST DROPS OUT WITH SOME OF THOSE SHOWERS AND STORMS MOVING IN. WINDS CONTINUE TO MOVE TO THE NORTH AND NORTHEAST, AND WE’LL NOTICE THAT TREND TOMORROW COULD BE 10 TO 20 MILES AN HOUR, 86 DEGREES. TYPICALLY WE’RE AT 89, ONLY HIT 86 THIS AFTERNOON AS CLOUDS STARTED TO BUILD. NOW THE IMPACT HOURS LATER IN THE AFTERNOON, AS WE MENTIONED 67 IN THE FOOTHILLS AND TEMPERATURES THERE MAY BE IN THE LOW TO MID 80S COULD BE EVEN WARMER THAN THE TRIAD, AS YOU EXPECT TO SEE LESS COVERAGE WITH THOSE SHOWERS. AND THERE’S A POSSIBILITY IN THE MOUNTAINS TOO, THAT YOU COULD GET SOME OFF AND ON SCATTERED SHOWERS BEFORE YOU SEE THINGS CLEAR OUT AS THE STORM MOVES OFF TO THE NORTH AND EAST, SO THE RAINFALL WILL VARY. WE’VE GOT ABOUT A QUARTER OF AN INCH TO AN INCH OR HIGHER IN THOSE THUNDERSTORMS. THAT MIGHT IMPACT FOLKS FROM BURLINGTON THROUGH AREAS LIKE LIBERTY AND DOWN THROUGH ASHEBORO. THOSE ARE THE FOLKS THAT COULD SEE SOME OF THE HIGHER TOTALS TRACE TO ABOUT 3/10 OF AN INCH FOR THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS, AND THOSE GUSTS UP TO ABOUT 0 TO 30 ON THE HIGH END, IF WE CAN EVEN GET THERE. SO FLOODING RISK MAINLY TO THE EAST. AND TAKE A LOOK AT THAT FORECAST OVER THE NEXT TWO DAYS. WE’VE GOT IMPACTS FOR YOU ON YOUR SUNDAY AND RAIN CHANCES AT ABOUT 60%. HERE’S THAT HOUR BY HOUR FORECAST, FOLKS. IT CONTINUES TO WRAP IN AS WE GO THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. THIS FORECAST SHOWING US THAT GRAPH MODEL HERE GIVING US SOME HEAVIER DOWNPOURS A LITTLE FARTHER WEST. AND THAT’S WHAT COULD HAPPEN IF IT DOES CHANGE TRACK A LITTLE BIT. BUT RIGHT NOW, FAVORITE FAVORITE TRACK BY THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER TAKES IT EAST. YOU CAN SEE THE WATER TEMPERATURES HERE AT THE SURFACE IN THE 80S, AND THAT CERTAINLY HAS BEEN ABLE TO TAP INTO IT AS WE ARE SEEING THAT SYSTEM NOW, SUSTAINED WINDS AT 50 MILES AN HOUR WITH CHANTAL, IT WILL MAKE LANDFALL OVERNIGHT AND THEN TOMORROW IT WILL BE OUT OF HERE BY LATE EVENING. 90 ON MONDAY. STEAMY. AND THEN SOME MORE STORMS FOR MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK. WE’LL H
Tropical Storm Chantal forecast to reach Carolinas by Sunday
Tropical Storm Chantal is forecast to hit the Carolinas on Sunday as a tropical storm. A tropical storm warning is in effect for the South Santee River, S.C., to Surf City, N.C. The storm became a tropical depression Friday night off the coasts of Northeast Florida and Georgia. It will be the first system to impact the United States this Atlantic hurricane season, which began on June 1. The system is expected to become a depression upon going inland in North Carolina on Sunday night, NHC says. The National Hurricane Center says heavy rainfall could cause flash flooding in parts of South Carolina and North Carolina, and isolated tornadoes are possible Saturday night and Sunday night in the eastern part of the state. The center of the storm will move across South Carolina’s coast Sunday morning, with a landfall predicted between Charleston and Myrtle Beach at 8 a.m. Sunday. It is the third named storm of the hurricane season; the first two have dissipated.
South and North Carolina are already encountering dangerous rip and surf conditions during the Fourth of July holiday weekend
Chantal, the third named storm of the season, will be the first system to impact the United States this Atlantic hurricane season, which began June 1.
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Landfall is predicted between Charleston and Myrtle Beach in South Carolina at 8 a.m. Sunday and will become a depression upon going inland in North Carolina on Sunday night, NHV said.
“As tropical cyclones go, this storm will be relatively minor and short-lived,” Frank Strait, severe weather liaison with the South Carolina State Climate Office, told the Island Packet.
Chantal is forecast to hit the Carolinas on Sunday as a tropical storm. Image by National Hurricane Center
In the 8 p.m. EDT update, Chantal had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph and was traveling northward at 7 mph, which is unchanged from the 5 p.m. update.
The storm became a tropical depression Friday night off the coasts of Northeast Florida and Georgia.
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Chantal was about 95 miles south-southeast of Charleston, S.C., and about 165 miles south-southwest of Wilmington, N.C.
A tropical storm warning is in effect for the South Santee River, S.C., to Surf City, N.C. A tropical storm watch goes from Edisto Beach to South Santee River.
Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 140 miles east of the center.
“Chantal has barely moved since last night, but a motion to the north-northwest is expected to begin soon,” NHC forecasters said. “The main steering features appear to be a mid- to upper-level low over the Gulf and a narrow mid-level ridge across the mid-Atlantic region.”
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Some strengthening is expected before Chantal reaches the coast, NHC said.
A turn to the northeast is forecast by Sunday night, NHC said. On the forecast track, the center of Chantal is expected to move across South Carolina’s coast Sunday morning.
Chantal is expected to produce heavy rainfall in the Carolinas through Monday with 2 to 4 inches and local amounts of 6 inches. NHC said these rains could cause flash flooding
“The combination of storm surge and tide will cause normally dry areas near the coast to be flooded by rising waters moving inland from the shoreline,” NHC said.
Storm surge is forecast at 1-3 feet from South Santee River to Surf City and 1-2 feet from Edisto Beach to South Santee River.
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Also, isolated tornadoes are possible Saturday night into Sunday along South Carolina’s eastern coast and much of North Carolina, NHC said.
“This was a classic example of homegrown development, by which a tropical storm formed close to the southeast Atlantic coast and in an area where it is typical for July,” AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Expert Alex DaSilva said.
In Wilmington, N.C., red flags were up at the beach.
“The rip current advisory is going to be high for today and potentially tomorrow as well. If you see red flags, under no circumstances should you get into the water,” Sam Proffitt, the Ocean Rescue Director at Wrightsville Beach, told WRAL-TV.
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“Although it might look calm out there and we don’t have 8-foot swells coming in, rip currents can occur at any time, anywhere along the beach.”
There were 192 rip current drownings reported from 2000 to 2024 in North and South Carolina.
“For most swimmers, the only thing that they notice is that they are unable to make it back to shore. They start swimming into shore and they notice that they are moving backward, and that’s typically where the panicking process starts, and the whole drowning process then begins,” Proffitt said.
Officials are also warning beachgoers about possible lightning in the area.
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In the Charleston area, WCIV-TV meteorologist Sonya Stevens said there is high surf and high rip current risk Saturday, and water activities are discouraged, including boating.
Andrea and Barry, the first two named systems of the Atlantic hurricane season, have dissipated.
Source: https://www.wxii12.com/article/tropical-rain-north-carolina-weather/65305372