Clouds this morning. #beforeAlberto #brattFL @rzweather @WEARAllenStrum @StormHour @Chris_WPMI pic.twitter.com/stbrOsx8Dj
— Angela Brown (@AngelaB0521) May 27, 2018
Clouds this morning. #beforeAlberto #brattFL @rzweather @WEARAllenStrum @StormHour @Chris_WPMI pic.twitter.com/stbrOsx8Dj
— Angela Brown (@AngelaB0521) May 27, 2018
Pretty significant shift overnight in the cone of uncertainty… NHC cone has center of Alberto making landfall between Orange Beach, AL and Carrabelle, FL. IF (big if) this verifies, potentially lower rain totals for SW Alabama & far western Florida Panhandle! pic.twitter.com/9rkuQC695C
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) May 27, 2018
Good morning! Showers from Alberto remain offshore as of 6AM. The showers and storms you see on the radar image above will progressively spread north toward the coast over the next few hours.
The projected path of Subtropical Storm Alberto has shifted eastward this morning I’ll have a detailed update a bit later.
RAIN/STORMS POSSIBLE ON SUNDAY MORNING… Some of the first outer rain bands from Alberto could reach southwest Alabama and northwest Florida near or before daybreak on Sunday. The tornado potential will start when those first bands arrive/develop. This means you must have a way to receive urgent tornado warnings before you go to sleep!
Please scroll down to the 9:07PM post for a HIGHLY detailed, comprehensive post of what you can expect from the impacts of Alberto over the next few days.
My next update will be posted early on Sunday morning, likely in the 7AM hour unless we have tornado warnings before that locally. Here is a link to our coverage policy.
Alberto is slated to drop a whole lot of water across Florida and the Deep South… Most spots south of VA & KY and east of MS in the CONUS get at least 2” over the next few days. ? pic.twitter.com/zAPTsBEnkg
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) May 27, 2018