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Are there tropical storm watches in the Caribbean?

Are there tropical storm watches in the Caribbean?

Tropical storm watches have already been issued for St.Vincent & Grenadines, St. Lucia, Barbados, Martinique and Barbados (see the advisories for the latest). Once it crosses the island chain it will end up in the central Caribbean, often a ‘graveyard’ for tropical cyclones.

Are there any hurricane reports in the Caribbean?

stormCARIB presents in depth information, weather discussions and local reports regarding tropical storms and hurricanes threatening the Caribbean islands. Special local hurricane correspondents are standing by on the islands and will provide timely eye-witness reports and updates.

Are there any tropical cyclones in the Caribbean?

Daily wx updates for East Caribbean are in Quick Infosection. No Atlantic TROPICAL Cyclones Click map for detail info. NOTE: Shaded areas do not necessarily denote “invests”. National Hurricane Center Atlantic Tropical Weather Outlook 2-day 5-day Text Alternate Atlantic Tropical Weather Discussion Alternate

How to find out about tropical storms in the Atlantic?

Atlantic IR color satellite HiRes (Intellicast) (SITE NAVIGATION BAR- CLICK TO JUMP BETWEEN SECTIONS) Top Main Links Atlantic Cyclones Cyclone Scales Acronyms Time SPEEDING! MAIN PAGES of TROPICAL WEATHER LINKS National Hurricane Center/Tropical Prediction Center (NCEP) Tropical Storm Watch (FEMA) Interactive Weather Information Network (NWS)

Where is Tropical Storm Gonzalo in the Caribbean?

Gonzalo formed on Wednesday in the central Atlantic Basin, and forecasts show there’s a chance it could strengthen into a hurricane. A hurricane watch is in effect for the islands of Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Those islands plus St. Lucia are also under a tropical storm warning.

Is there a hurricane watch in effect for Barbados?

A hurricane watch is in effect for the islands of Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Those islands plus St. Lucia are also under a tropical storm warning. As of 11 a.m. Friday, Gonzalo had maximum sustained winds near 50 mph, with higher gusts, and was moving to the west at about 18 mph.