National Hurricane Center, Florida and Storm Tracker
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FOX 35 Orlando on MSNForecasters watching 2 areas of tropical moisture with potential for development: Will Florida feel impacts?Florida could feel impacts from an area of tropical moisture that includes remnants of the same system that dumped rain over the state last weekend. Forecasters are also watching another developing tropical wave in the distant Atlantic Ocean.
Invest 93L could become a tropical depression as it moves across Florida into the Gulf. See latest spaghetti models.
Invest 93L is taking its time moving across Florida, and it could still become a tropical depression later this week.
As mangoes reach peak ripeness, some Miami-area restaurants are accepting them as currency, offering cocktails, desserts and bread in exchange for the tropical fruit.
Heat Advisory for Okeechobee County goes in effect at 12 pm through 6pm. Feels-like temperatures above 105 degrees. Rain is returning this week starting on Tuesday and continuing through Friday. Wednesday and Thursday, tropical moisture will bring rain and storms across the state of Florida.
As a mass of showers and thunderstorms from the United States moves over open waters of the Gulf next week, there is a low chance of tropical development. The painstaking recovery efforts continue for around 100 people still missing following the devastating July Fourth flooding along the Guadalupe River in central Texas.
A disturbance near Florida could evolve into a tropical depression or Tropical Storm Dexter this week, according to forecasters.
Regardless of development, heavy rainfall is expected over portions of Florida, which could bring localized flash flooding through mid-week.
A weather system moving across Florida wasn’t even a tropical something but it has the potential to develop into a tropical depression as it moves across the Gulf later in the week.
The system’s slow passage over Florida has meant days of rain throughout the state, leading to street flooding in South Florida. However, the Miami office of the National Weather Service expects the rain to slow down, alleviating any concerns about deep flooding.
3don MSN
L continues to move westward across the Gulf Coast and is producing disorganized showers and thunderstorms, according to the National Hurricane Center. The system is expected to continue moving westward across the northern portion of the Gulf,