NHC continues tracking Tropical Storm Sara
Published in News & Features
ORLANDO, Fla. — Tropical Storm Sara is forecast to slog its way over Central America this weekend but lose organization before remnants make their way into the Gulf of Mexico and get sucked back to the east toward Florida next week.
As of the National Hurricane Center’s 7 p.m. advisory, Sara was located about 30 miles west-northwest of Isla Roatan, Honduras and 95 miles southeast of Belize City, Belize moving west at 5 mph with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. Tropical-storm-force winds extend out 105 miles.
A tropical storm warning was in effect for the northern coast of Honduras from Punta Castilla west to the Honduras-Guatemala border, the Bay Islands of Honduras, the Caribbean coast of Guatemala, the coast of Belize and the coast of Mexico from Puerto Costa Maya south to Chetumal.
“On the forecast track, the center of Sara will approach Belize (Saturday night) before moving onshore over Belize during the day on Sunday,” forecasters said.
The slow storm is forecast to drop as much as 35 inches of rain over parts of northern Honduras and as much as 15 inches over the rest of Honduras, Belize, El Salvador, eastern Guatemala, western Nicaragua and the Mexican State of Quintana Roo, with the threat of flash flooding and mudslides.
Long-term weather models still project the remnant low-pressure system to steer back to the east through the Gulf of Mexico afterward. Whatever is leftover could be affecting Florida by Wednesday.
The National Weather Service in Melbourne forecasts increased rain chances midweek before a cold front pushes through the area. “Environmental conditions still look to remain unfavorable for any tropical redevelopment with Sara`s remnants over the Gulf, which latest model guidance continues to support,” NWS meteorologist Derrick Weitlich said.
“However, as the deeper moisture left over from this system shifts toward Florida ahead of an approaching cold front, rain chances will increase, with the potential for some locally heavy rainfall.”
The 2024 Atlantic hurricane season has produced 18 named storms, 11 of which have become hurricanes. The season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.
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