
Mouth of the St.Tropical cyclones are ranked on one of five tropical cyclone intensity scales, according to their maximum sustained winds and which tropical cyclone basins they are located in.North Palm Beach Florida to Altamaha Sound Georgia.North of Bonita Beach to the Ochlockonee River.South of Hallandale Beach to north of Ocean Reef.Flagler/Volusia County line to Altamaha Sound, Georgia.Andros Island, New Providence, and Eleuthera in the northwestern Bahamas.Flagler/Volusia County line to Ponte Vedra BeachĪ tropical storm warning is in effect for:.Boca Raton to Flagler/Volusia County line.

The Abacos, Berry Islands, Bimini, and Grand Bahama Island in the northwestern Bahamas.Thursday afternoon will bring scattered showers and storms, along with strong winds.įriday will be wet and windy to start the day, with slow clearing throughout the afternoon. "Maybe even hurricane-force winds by early Thursday morning, Wednesday night into Thursday morning." "Tropical storm conditions, winds over 40 mph, expected as early as tomorrow morning," Hall said. Onshore winds could push ocean water onshore, resulting in storm surge. Hall said this is when we'll likely see the worst of the weather. Wednesday night into Thursday morning, Nicole is expected to move onshore as a Category 1 hurricane packing maximum sustained winds about 75 mph. Tropical storm winds in excess of 40 mph are possible as early as Wednesday morning, Hall said. Within some of those rain squalls, we could see isolated tornadoes, strong wind gusts, and heavy downpours. On Wednesday, numerous showers and storms are expected across the area as the outer rain bands from Nicole start to move in. DeSantis declares state of emergency for 34 Florida countiesįor our viewing area, Hall said showers and storms will increase throughout Tuesday evening, bringing rough beach and boating conditions, along with a threat for coastal flooding and beach erosion. "But if it takes the southern track, obviously for us, the impacts would be considerably more." "If it takes that northern track, the impacts for us will be considerably less," Villanueva said. Villanueva said Nicole's cone of uncertainty extends from West Palm Beach north to Daytona Beach. "Tomorrow night around midnight or so, that's when it's approaching the northern Treasure Coast," WPTV First Alert Weather meteorologist Steve Villanueva said. The system is expected to strengthen into a Category 1 hurricane before making landfall on the east coast of Florida - anywhere from West Palm Beach to Daytona Beach - late Wednesday or overnight Thursday. Nicole will then move across central and northern Florida and into southern Georgia on Thursday. The NHC said Nicole will approach the northwestern Bahamas on Tuesday, move near or over those islands on Wednesday, and approach the east coast of Florida Wednesday night. "You have today to get those last-minute storm preps in order before the storm's arrival," Hall said. SPECIAL COVERAGE: Hurricane Center | WPTV Hurricane GuideĪccording to WPTV First Alert Weather meteorologist Kahtia Hall, there is a severe weather and flash flooding threat for our viewing area on Wednesday and Thursday. A storm surge warning is in effect for North Palm Beach north through the entire Treasure Coast. In addition to the hurricane warning, a hurricane watch is in effect for Hallandale Beach north to Boca Raton, as well as for Lake Okeechobee. "Nicole will become a hurricane by Wednesday morning but shouldn't rapidly strengthen due to wind shear and dry air entrained in the system," WPTV First Alert Weather meteorologist James Wieland said. Nicole is now near hurricane strength as it heads toward the northwest Bahamas, taking aim at Florida.

The system has maximum sustained winds of 70 mph and is moving west, southwest at 10 mph. advisory from the NHC, Nicole - which transitioned into a tropical storm earlier in the day and shifted slightly to the south - is about 325 miles east of West Palm Beach. Lucie and Indian River counties - means hurricane conditions are expected in the next 36 hours.Īccording to the 10 p.m. A hurricane warning is in effect for Boca Raton north to the Flagler-Volusia County line as Tropical Storm Nicole strengthens and pushes west toward Florida, where it could make landfall as a Category 1 hurricane, the National Hurricane Center said.Ī hurricane warning - which currently includes coastal Palm Beach County, along with Martin, St.
