- Marking 40 years since one of the deadliest tornado outbreaks in North Carolina history
- On this day: Small NC town nearly leveled by devastating F4 tornado
- Outer Banks flooding and overwash closes NC 12, ferry on Ocracoke Island
- Cows at three Texas dairy farms have bird flu, another blow to Cattle Country following wildfires
- What we learned from the 2024 National Hurricane Conference
Tropical Storm Beta forms in Gulf of Mexico; Subtropical Storm Alpha hits Portugal
It’s been a busy Friday in the tropics with two new storms named for letters in the Greek alphabet.
Subtropical Storm Alpha formed off the coast of Portugal on Friday afternoon. It made landfall in Portugal Friday night and was expected to dissipate into Saturday.
A subtropical system has characteristics of both a low-pressure system and a tropical storm. Names are given to storms that have sustained wind speeds higher than 39 mph. In the 5 p.m. advisory from the National Hurricane Center, Alpha was 120 miles north northeast of Lisbon, Portugal with winds at 45 mph.
Tropical Storm Beta formed Friday afternoon, according to the 5 p.m. advisory from the NHC. It had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph and was moving north northeast at 9 mph. The storm was off the Mexico coast and was expected to move further north and likely impact Texas in the coming days.
Tropical Storm Wilfred also formed in the eastern Tropical Atlantic on Friday. It was the last name left on the list generated at the beginning of hurricane season by the World Meteorological Organization. At 5 p.m., it had winds at 40 mph and was moving west northwest at 18 mph. It was about 735 miles west southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands.
Each storm after WiIfred will now be named storms based on the Greek alphabet. The last time that happened was 2005, when there were 28 named storms.
Hurricane Teddy, currently a Cat. 4 storm, has top winds of 125 mph and was moving northwest at 14 mph. It is 795 miles southeast of Bermuda. It could impact Bermuda in the coming days and create rip current threats along the United States. It could make landfall north of Maine next week, meteorologist Elizabeth Gardner said.
We are in the peak of hurricane season until early-mid October. The season officially ends Nov. 30.