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WATER SHORTAGE WARNING
Officials say mandatory water restrictions may be considered: http://bit.ly/2pnGaUc
Taffy wrote:In addition to the large fire in Charlotte county, Lee county had a small 11 acre fire in Lehigh Acres. Our canals are so low or dry that the fire rescue were reporting they were unable to get enough water from the canal. I
.UPDATE...We will start to see a slow moistening trend overnight
as the disturbance lifting out of the Gulf of Mexico starts to
lift the tropical plume to our south back into the region. Area of
showers across the FL Straits and Cuba are expected to lift
northwards overnight, but perhaps just reach the far southern
areas of the peninsula towards daybreak. As moisture increases a
few more Bahamian convergent bands will be possible, though with
flow veering more southeasterly these may more parallel the coast
than move into it. Will add isolated showers to the Atlantic
waters for the current convergence bands.
THIS WEEKEND AND MONDAY: Area of disturbed weather over the Gulf
will be picked up by the trough swinging through the central and
southern US on Saturday, and lifted across the region through the
weekend. The southern extent of main trough is then forecast to dig
across the southeastern US/N Florida with a deepening upper level
low as it swings across.
As the disturbance lifts north tomorrow, low level flow will veer
southerly, tapping into the tropical moisture plume to our south.
Models have continued with the solution of a very moist environment
advecting across the region with PWATs likely approaching 2 inches.
The setup looks favorable for a period of much needed moderate to
heavy rain with good isentropic lift in a very moist environment.
Extensive cloud cover will likely minimize instability, but
enough will be present for an isolated thunderstorm mention
through Monday. Given the extensive rainfall deficits across the
region, no significant flooding is currently expected.
The forecast will be for increasing coverage of showers starting
late Saturday morning/afternoon, with coverage likely maximizing
Saturday night into Sunday afternoon. Models hint at potential
Gulf and Atlantic seabreezes both days, which will maximize
convergence and rainfall amounts if they materialize.
As mid level flow veers west-southwest Sunday night ahead of the
main trough, most of the tropical moisture will get shunted off to
our east. Overall rain coverage is expected to decrease on
Monday, but at least isolated showers can still be expected as the
the surface low crosses the state and brings a frontal boundary
through the region.
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