Timeline shows potential dates for next 2 storms
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The advisory begins at noon Friday and remains in effect through 9 a.m. Saturday, with highs between 99 and 102 degrees expected both days. Overnight lows will stay in the upper 60s. The alert covers the greater Reno-Carson City-Minden area and Mineral and southern Lyon counties.
Chances continue to grow that two new storms could form in the Atlantic in the next few days, but neither pose a likely threat to Florida or most of the Caribbean anytime soon. The National Hurricane Center also removed a third disturbance it had been tracking from the map on Friday afternoon.
Hurricane Erin battered the East Coast beaches this week but stayed offshore and never made landfall. Connecticut got very lucky again! Erin grew into a Category 5 hurricane earlier this week, but weakened to a Category 2 as it accelerated out to sea south and east of Southern New England.
The cooler airmass will continue into the start of next week with highs in the mid to upper 70s. Humidity will continue to be low. Temperatures will start warming back to average by the end of next week. Little to no rain chances for all of next week.
Thunderstorms will develop during the afternoon Friday with more rain chances this weekend
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) - A stray shower or storm early, mainly near the foothills and mountains. Lows will range from the 60s on the Plateau and mountains to near 70 in the valley. Winds will be light.
Temperatures heat up before before storms take over mid-day. Look for highs in the low 90s with a few heavy downpours. One or two storms could become strong to severe.
The ocean is taking more than it gives on Martha's Vineyard. Each storm is cutting deeper into South Beach in Edgartown, and the pace is accelerating."The storms are coming a bit harder and faster," said Edgartown conservation agent Kara Shemeth.