Tropical
Depression Bonnie has made landfall in South Carolina. Bonnie weakened
from a tropical storm to a tropical depression Sunday morning. Look for
rain, some wind, and choppy surf to some of the beaches of the Carolinas
and Georgia through this Memorial Day holiday weekend.
Here is the latest on Tropical Depression Bonnie.
Highlights
- Tropical Depression Bonnie made landfall just east of Charleston, South Carolina, on the Isle of Palms around 8:30 a.m. Sunday.
- Maximum sustained winds were 35 mph as of Sunday morning.
- Tropical Storm Bonnie is currently moving northward at about 9 mph.
- Bonnie is not expected to change in strength today, with slow weakening expected on Monday.
- All tropical storm warnings have been discontinued.
- Areas of rain, gusty winds, dangerous rip currents, some elevated surf, a small storm surge and minor coastal flooding will be the impacts.
- Rainfall totals of two to four inches (locally heavier amounts) could produce localized flooding over parts of South Carolina.
- An isolated tornado or two will be possible through Sunday afternoon over the immediate coastal region of South Carolina.
(MORE: Hurricane Central)
Latest Status
(MORE: What is an "Invest"?)
Enhanced Satellite, Current Winds
Current Radar
Bands of rain ahead of the circulation have moved onshore and pockets of heavy rain have been reported around the southern coast of South Carolina.
(MORE: View National Interactive Radar Map
Projected Path
Tropical Depression Bonnie made landfall east of Charleston, South Carolina on Sunday morning.
Potential Impacts
The main impacts from this system will be poor beach and boating conditions, along with locally heavy rain, this weekend.Those impacts will also include the potential for rip currents and high surf for parts of the Southeast coast during the Memorial Day weekend.
Sunday Forecast
(INTERACTIVE: Tropical Storm Bonnie Tracker Map)
(MORE: Holiday Weekend Outlook)
A moisture plume will be pulled north, then northeast along the East Coast Sunday into Monday from the same upper-level steering winds channeling this system into the Carolinas. One to three inches of rainfall are forecast along the low country of South Carolina and coastal North Carolina.
While not directly related to the tropical cyclone itself, this could wring out areas of locally heavy rainfall up and down the Eastern Seaboard from parts of New England to the Carolinas, with local flash flooding possible.
Rainfall Forecast Through Monday Night
(FORECAST: Virginia Beach | Hatteras | Myrtle Beach | Daytona Beach)
Southeast Coast is Typically an Early Season Area to Watch
This map shows the typical formation areas and tracks for named storms in June.
The
area off the Southeast coast, as well as the Gulf of Mexico and
northwest Caribbean, is a part of the Atlantic basin where early-season
tropical or subtropical storm development is most likely.That said, it's not a very active time of year for storms to form compared to the peak August-October period. For example, only one named storm forms during June every other year, on average.
(MORE: Where June Storms Develop)
Recent seasons have had activity before the start of June.
Last May, Tropical Storm Ana formed off the Southeast coast before making landfall near Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, with minor impacts.
In 2012 two named storms, Alberto and Beryl, formed during May off the Southeast coast. Beryl would go on to make landfall in northeast Florida, while Alberto moved out to sea.
(MORE: When Hurricane Season Starts Early)
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