Florida, Gulf and tropical system
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The National Hurricane Center said July 16 it is continuing to monitor an area of low pressure moving across Florida toward the Gulf.
Depression or no depression, the system could bring several inches of rain to the north-central Gulf Coast, including Alabama, through Friday. The National Weather Service in Mobile thinks that the most rain with this system will likely fall closer to the coast, with scattered storms possible.
The National Hurricane Center on Wednesday continued to project a medium chance that a system moving over Florida would emerge into the Gulf and develop into the season’s next tropical
The storm system that brought flooding rain to parts of Central Florida is now moving west across the Florida Panhandle.
Much of Acadiana is under a flash flood watch from 7 a.m. Thursday to 7 p.m. Saturday, including Lafayette, Iberia, Vermilion, Acadia, Evangeline, St. Landry, St. Martin and St. Mary parishes.
Regardless of how the system develops, the National Weather Service said in a Wednesday morning update that "a surge of tropical moisture could enhance the risk of showers and thunderstorms" in Southeast Texas by the end of the week.
A low-pressure system that could bring storms to Florida before moving west has a medium chance of developing into a tropical cyclone over the next several days, according to the
Forecasters from National Weather Service and AccuWeather use graphics to explain impacts across Florida, Gulf Coast from Invest 93L.