Tropical Storm Barry Forms Off Florida

"The Hatfields and the McCoys" / Chris Large
Tropical Storm Barry formed in the Gulf of Mexico on Friday — the first day of hurricane season — and the National Hurricane Center issued a tropical storm warning for a stretch of Florida's western coast.
The storm was about 320 miles southwest of Tampa about 5 p.m. and was moving north at around 12 mph with maximum sustained winds of about 45 mph. Forecasters expected Barry to turn east and increase in speed over the next day, though no significant change in strength was anticipated before possible landfall.
National Hurricane Center forecaster Daniel Brown told CBS News that Barry doesn't look like it will have the opportunity to intensify greatly: "The upper-air winds are not all that favorable over the Gulf of Mexico, so we don't think it will strengthen much, but it certainly is expected to move fairly quickly up towards the Big Bend area and probably make landfall sometime later tomorrow [Saturday]."
Word of the storm's development came on the first official day of a hurricane season that forecasters have said they expect to be busier than normal. The National Weather Service said it expects 13 to 17 tropical storms, with seven to 10 becoming hurricanes and three to five in the strong category.
Dave Roberts, a hurricane specialist at the Hurricane Center, said it was "coincidence, maybe," that the storm formed on the first day of the season.
Forecasters issued a tropical storm warning, meaning tropical storm conditions are expected in the next day, for the Gulf Coast from Bonita Beach, Fla. to Keaton Beach, Fla. A less-severe tropical storm watch, meaning such conditions were expected within 36 hours, was issued from north of Keaton Beach to St. Marks.
The hurricane center said Barry threatened to bring dangerous battering waves, coastal flooding up to 5 feet and rainfall of 3 to 6 inches in the Florida Keys up through southeast Georgia.
The tropical weather wasn't expected to ease drought conditions much in Florida, which is facing one of its driest years on record.
"It'll help a little bit, but everyone is so far below rainfall that we're still going to be under drought conditions," said Kim Brabander, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. "To really alleviate the drought conditions, we're going to need anywhere from 30 to 40 inches of rain."
Tropical Storm Barry formed more than three weeks after the first named storm of the year — Subtropical Storm Andrea — developed off Florida's eastern coast. Andrea skirted the southern Atlantic coast but caused minimal damage.
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. The storm was about 320 miles southwest of Tampa about 5 p.m. and was moving north at around 12 mph with maximum sustained winds of about 45 mph. Forecasters expected Barry to turn east and increase in speed over the next day, though no significant change in strength was anticipated before possible landfall.
National Hurricane Center forecaster Daniel Brown told CBS News that Barry doesn't look like it will have the opportunity to intensify greatly: "The upper-air winds are not all that favorable over the Gulf of Mexico, so we don't think it will strengthen much, but it certainly is expected to move fairly quickly up towards the Big Bend area and probably make landfall sometime later tomorrow [Saturday]."
Word of the storm's development came on the first official day of a hurricane season that forecasters have said they expect to be busier than normal. The National Weather Service said it expects 13 to 17 tropical storms, with seven to 10 becoming hurricanes and three to five in the strong category.
Dave Roberts, a hurricane specialist at the Hurricane Center, said it was "coincidence, maybe," that the storm formed on the first day of the season.
Forecasters issued a tropical storm warning, meaning tropical storm conditions are expected in the next day, for the Gulf Coast from Bonita Beach, Fla. to Keaton Beach, Fla. A less-severe tropical storm watch, meaning such conditions were expected within 36 hours, was issued from north of Keaton Beach to St. Marks.
The hurricane center said Barry threatened to bring dangerous battering waves, coastal flooding up to 5 feet and rainfall of 3 to 6 inches in the Florida Keys up through southeast Georgia.
The tropical weather wasn't expected to ease drought conditions much in Florida, which is facing one of its driest years on record.
"It'll help a little bit, but everyone is so far below rainfall that we're still going to be under drought conditions," said Kim Brabander, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. "To really alleviate the drought conditions, we're going to need anywhere from 30 to 40 inches of rain."
Tropical Storm Barry formed more than three weeks after the first named storm of the year — Subtropical Storm Andrea — developed off Florida's eastern coast. Andrea skirted the southern Atlantic coast but caused minimal damage.
Popular in SciTech
- iPhone 5S and low-cost iPhone said to be multicolored
- Weird pirate ant comes with an "eye patch"
- Ashton Kutcher on Twitter: "Media kind of f***ed it up"
- Apple's next iPhone may be coming in June
- The 7 weirdest things made by 3D printing
- Jennifer Lopez to open Verizon cellphone stores
- Amazon proposes a colossal biospherelike Seattle campus
- Alternatives to Google Reader
1 Comments Add a Comment
- linkicon reporticon emailicon
- Are the reporters ignorant or worse? I notice they ignored the two tropical storms that formed of the coast of Mexico before the season even began. Barbara is still there, and is expected to make landfall this weekend. Alvin is no longer mentioned, so at least we didn't end up with 3 tropical storms in this side of the world at the same time. We've already broken a record by having two tropical storms in the Americas in May. And they keep talking about how last season wasn't as bad as predicted, because of the El Nino/Nina? They ignore the horrendous hurricanes in the other side of the world last year.
- reply












