Bertha weakens as it spreads heavy rain over Carolinas
By
Alex Sosnowski, AccuWeather senior meteorologist
Published May 26, 2020 4:56 PM EDT
Tropical Storm Bertha approached the South Carolina coastline, bringing heavy wind and rain to the state on May 27.
A fast-moving system developed on Wednesday morning into the second named tropical storm of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, which doesn't officially begin until June 1, made landfall and then quickly weakened into a depression by late Wednesday afternoon.
Still days away from the official start of hurricane season, the Southeast coast of the U.S. on Wednesday was dealing with its second named tropical system in less than two weeks. A weather disturbance that left Miami streets underwater over the Memorial Day weekend rapidly strengthened off of the South Carolina coast Tuesday night and was named Tropical Storm Bertha for several hours on Wednesday.
Unlike Tropical Storm Arthur, which flirted with the North Carolina coast on May 18 before making a right turn and heading out to sea, Bertha made landfall Wednesday on the South Carolina coast about 20 miles east of Charleston. By late Wednesday afternoon, the storm had been downgraded but was still packing 30 mph sustained winds and was barreling inland north-northwest at 15 mph.
A satellite image showing Bertha, the second named storm of the season, making landfall over South Carolina, just northeast of Charleston around 9:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday. The official start to hurricane season is on June 1. (AccuWeather)
Satellite and radar images showed a definitive spin near the center of the system just offshore of the South Carolina coast on Wednesday morning, a sign that the tropical storm was forming. Winds offshore were sustained in the 35-40 mph range with gusts between 40 and 50 mph early Wednesday morning. To meet the tropical storm criteria, a system must have sustained winds of 39 mph or greater. Based on sustained wind speeds, and the visible circulation, the National Hurricane Center upgraded the feature to Tropical Storm Bertha just prior to 8 a.m. EDT.
Bertha made landfall around 9:30 a.m. EDT about 20 miles east of Charleston with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph. On the AccuWeather RealImpact™Scale for Hurricanes, Bertha is categorized as less than 1 with minimal impact from wind. Flooding is the greatest concern for lives and property at this point.
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Now that Bertha has moved hundreds of miles inland and is a tropical rainstorm, few problems in terms of rough surf are in store for the Carolina coast. There can still be locally heavy thunderstorms on the prowl due to a stream of tropical moisture from the Atlantic in the wake of Bertha.
During Wednesday night, Bertha will weaken upon moving well inland with the center of the soon-to-be tropical rainstorm to travel northward and roughly along the Interstate 77 corridor in North Carolina and Virginia.
"Interaction with land and fast movement will be a great limiting factor with this feature, but the main impact will be a continuation of heavy rain moving forward during the middle of the week over the Carolinas then to some extent farther north over the central Appalachians from later Wednesday night to Thursday," AccuWeather Chief On-Air Meteorologist Bernie Rayno said.
A general 1-3 inches of rain is forecast with an AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 8 inches over the Carolinas and southwestern Virginia through Wednesday night.
A significant amount of this rain may fall in a matter of a few hours, especially along the coast. That intensity of rainfall can be enough to trigger flash flooding, including in cities such as Fayetteville, Charlotte, Wilmington and Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Roanoke and Wytheville, Virginia; and Charleston and Beckley, West Virginia.
"The problem is this rain will fall on saturated ground from prior heavy rainfall this month, so there could be flooding problems all the way from the Carolina coast to at least southwestern Virginia and West Virginia," according to AccuWeather Meteorologist Randy Adkins.
Heavy rain from Bertha can not only lead to rapid flooding of small streams and at intersections in urban areas, but also significant rises on area rivers.
Torrential rainfall associated from the same storm system produced flooding in South Florida over Memorial Day weekend. Streets were left inundated across Miami after the downpours struck. Miami picked up 7.43 inches of rain over the holiday weekend. On Tuesday alone, Miami picked up an additional 7.40 inches of rain, 6.35 inches of which fell over the course of two hours. The city has now recorded 18.88 inches of rain during May, more than triple the normal rainfall for the month.
West Palm Beach shattered its daily rainfall record on Monday when 4.44 inches poured down, beating the old record of 1.14 inches set on May 25 in 2018. Fort Lauderdale also recorded a new record rainfall on May 25, with a total of 4.03 inches breaking the old daily record of 3.51 inches set back in 1970.
As the feature continues to lift northward, lesser rainfall is forecast over West Virginia, Virginia, western Maryland, central and western Pennsylvania and central New York state from later Wednesday night to Thursday evening.
Even though rainfall in the Northeast may be unremarkable in terms of amount, it could certainly spoil the summerlike weather pattern that has developed and limit the duration of sunshine. The downpours could also briefly become heavy enough to slow travel on the highways and lead to brief urban flooding in a few extreme cases over the Northeast.
Not since 2016 have there been two named tropical systems prior to the official start of hurricane season, which is June 1. During 2016, Alex formed over the central Atlantic during the middle of January, while Bonnie did not follow until late May. In 2012, there were two tropical storms, Alberto and Beryl that formed in May. These storms formed just off the southern Atlantic coast, similar to that of this May. Alberto never made landfall, like Arthur from this year. However, Beryl did move onshore, just like Bertha will soon do.
Are there any other tropical systems on deck?
AccuWeather meteorologists will continue to monitor a couple of areas in the nearby tropics for trouble into early June as well.
One area of interest will be on the western side of Central America late this week to this weekend.
"A near-coast tropical depression or storm over the Eastern Pacific could come about and pester areas from Costa Rica to Guatemala," Kottlowski said.
This image, taken on Tuesday, May 26, 2020, shows a lack of organization to cloud patterns around Central America. However, that may change in the coming days with the slow development of a large gyre anticipated, which could spawn tropical systems over the western Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean. (NOAA/GOES-East)
"It appears a broad area of slowly-spinning unsettled conditions, known as a tropical gyre, will develop around Central America over the next week or two," he explained.
This large area of disturbed weather can sometimes assist with the spin up of tropical systems on the Pacific and Atlantic sides.
"There has been some indication that a tropical system may spin up over the western Caribbean Sea to near the Yucatan Peninsula sometime during the first week of June," Kottlowski said. "But, this far out it is something we will just keep an eye on."
While waters are plenty warm in the region to support a tropical storm, there are other considerations, such as wind shear, or changing wind speeds or direction with altitude, which may prevent a disturbance from developing in the first place.
"Should multiple computer models get on board with development and those models become fairly consistent with development then we may have something to be concerned about," Kottlowski explained.
Development during June in the Atlantic basin typically occurs from the western Caribbean through the Gulf of Mexico and within a few hundred miles along the southeastern coast of the United States.
The official start of the Atlantic hurricane season is on June 1, but there has already been a tropical storm, Arthur, in the basin. Arthur formed on May 16 and a couple of days later grazed the coast of North Carolina with gusty winds, drenching rainfall and rough seas, but Arthur never made an official landfall.
Following Bertha, the next name on the list of tropical storms in the Atlantic for the 2020 season is Cristobal.
AccuWeather's long-range forecasters remained concerned for a busy Atlantic hurricane season, which includes the likelihood of several significant storms of impact on the U.S. amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Concerns for the new coronavirus were already complicating plans for hurricane shelters as officials prepared for the hurricane season ahead.
Keep checking back on AccuWeather.com and stay tuned to the AccuWeather Network on DirecTV, Frontier and Verizon Fios.
Report a Typo
News / Hurricane
Bertha weakens as it spreads heavy rain over Carolinas
By Alex Sosnowski, AccuWeather senior meteorologist
Published May 26, 2020 4:56 PM EDT
Tropical Storm Bertha approached the South Carolina coastline, bringing heavy wind and rain to the state on May 27.
A fast-moving system developed on Wednesday morning into the second named tropical storm of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season, which doesn't officially begin until June 1, made landfall and then quickly weakened into a depression by late Wednesday afternoon.
Still days away from the official start of hurricane season, the Southeast coast of the U.S. on Wednesday was dealing with its second named tropical system in less than two weeks. A weather disturbance that left Miami streets underwater over the Memorial Day weekend rapidly strengthened off of the South Carolina coast Tuesday night and was named Tropical Storm Bertha for several hours on Wednesday.
Unlike Tropical Storm Arthur, which flirted with the North Carolina coast on May 18 before making a right turn and heading out to sea, Bertha made landfall Wednesday on the South Carolina coast about 20 miles east of Charleston. By late Wednesday afternoon, the storm had been downgraded but was still packing 30 mph sustained winds and was barreling inland north-northwest at 15 mph.
A satellite image showing Bertha, the second named storm of the season, making landfall over South Carolina, just northeast of Charleston around 9:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday. The official start to hurricane season is on June 1. (AccuWeather)
Satellite and radar images showed a definitive spin near the center of the system just offshore of the South Carolina coast on Wednesday morning, a sign that the tropical storm was forming. Winds offshore were sustained in the 35-40 mph range with gusts between 40 and 50 mph early Wednesday morning. To meet the tropical storm criteria, a system must have sustained winds of 39 mph or greater. Based on sustained wind speeds, and the visible circulation, the National Hurricane Center upgraded the feature to Tropical Storm Bertha just prior to 8 a.m. EDT.
Bertha made landfall around 9:30 a.m. EDT about 20 miles east of Charleston with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph. On the AccuWeather RealImpact™Scale for Hurricanes, Bertha is categorized as less than 1 with minimal impact from wind. Flooding is the greatest concern for lives and property at this point.
CLICK HERE FOR THE FREE ACCUWEATHER APP
Now that Bertha has moved hundreds of miles inland and is a tropical rainstorm, few problems in terms of rough surf are in store for the Carolina coast. There can still be locally heavy thunderstorms on the prowl due to a stream of tropical moisture from the Atlantic in the wake of Bertha.
During Wednesday night, Bertha will weaken upon moving well inland with the center of the soon-to-be tropical rainstorm to travel northward and roughly along the Interstate 77 corridor in North Carolina and Virginia.
"Interaction with land and fast movement will be a great limiting factor with this feature, but the main impact will be a continuation of heavy rain moving forward during the middle of the week over the Carolinas then to some extent farther north over the central Appalachians from later Wednesday night to Thursday," AccuWeather Chief On-Air Meteorologist Bernie Rayno said.
A general 1-3 inches of rain is forecast with an AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 8 inches over the Carolinas and southwestern Virginia through Wednesday night.
A significant amount of this rain may fall in a matter of a few hours, especially along the coast. That intensity of rainfall can be enough to trigger flash flooding, including in cities such as Fayetteville, Charlotte, Wilmington and Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Roanoke and Wytheville, Virginia; and Charleston and Beckley, West Virginia.
"The problem is this rain will fall on saturated ground from prior heavy rainfall this month, so there could be flooding problems all the way from the Carolina coast to at least southwestern Virginia and West Virginia," according to AccuWeather Meteorologist Randy Adkins.
Heavy rain from Bertha can not only lead to rapid flooding of small streams and at intersections in urban areas, but also significant rises on area rivers.
Torrential rainfall associated from the same storm system produced flooding in South Florida over Memorial Day weekend. Streets were left inundated across Miami after the downpours struck. Miami picked up 7.43 inches of rain over the holiday weekend. On Tuesday alone, Miami picked up an additional 7.40 inches of rain, 6.35 inches of which fell over the course of two hours. The city has now recorded 18.88 inches of rain during May, more than triple the normal rainfall for the month.
West Palm Beach shattered its daily rainfall record on Monday when 4.44 inches poured down, beating the old record of 1.14 inches set on May 25 in 2018. Fort Lauderdale also recorded a new record rainfall on May 25, with a total of 4.03 inches breaking the old daily record of 3.51 inches set back in 1970.
As the feature continues to lift northward, lesser rainfall is forecast over West Virginia, Virginia, western Maryland, central and western Pennsylvania and central New York state from later Wednesday night to Thursday evening.
Even though rainfall in the Northeast may be unremarkable in terms of amount, it could certainly spoil the summerlike weather pattern that has developed and limit the duration of sunshine. The downpours could also briefly become heavy enough to slow travel on the highways and lead to brief urban flooding in a few extreme cases over the Northeast.
Not since 2016 have there been two named tropical systems prior to the official start of hurricane season, which is June 1. During 2016, Alex formed over the central Atlantic during the middle of January, while Bonnie did not follow until late May. In 2012, there were two tropical storms, Alberto and Beryl that formed in May. These storms formed just off the southern Atlantic coast, similar to that of this May. Alberto never made landfall, like Arthur from this year. However, Beryl did move onshore, just like Bertha will soon do.
Are there any other tropical systems on deck?
AccuWeather meteorologists will continue to monitor a couple of areas in the nearby tropics for trouble into early June as well.
One area of interest will be on the western side of Central America late this week to this weekend.
"A near-coast tropical depression or storm over the Eastern Pacific could come about and pester areas from Costa Rica to Guatemala," Kottlowski said.
This image, taken on Tuesday, May 26, 2020, shows a lack of organization to cloud patterns around Central America. However, that may change in the coming days with the slow development of a large gyre anticipated, which could spawn tropical systems over the western Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean. (NOAA/GOES-East)
"It appears a broad area of slowly-spinning unsettled conditions, known as a tropical gyre, will develop around Central America over the next week or two," he explained.
This large area of disturbed weather can sometimes assist with the spin up of tropical systems on the Pacific and Atlantic sides.
"There has been some indication that a tropical system may spin up over the western Caribbean Sea to near the Yucatan Peninsula sometime during the first week of June," Kottlowski said. "But, this far out it is something we will just keep an eye on."
Related:
While waters are plenty warm in the region to support a tropical storm, there are other considerations, such as wind shear, or changing wind speeds or direction with altitude, which may prevent a disturbance from developing in the first place.
"Should multiple computer models get on board with development and those models become fairly consistent with development then we may have something to be concerned about," Kottlowski explained.
Development during June in the Atlantic basin typically occurs from the western Caribbean through the Gulf of Mexico and within a few hundred miles along the southeastern coast of the United States.
The official start of the Atlantic hurricane season is on June 1, but there has already been a tropical storm, Arthur, in the basin. Arthur formed on May 16 and a couple of days later grazed the coast of North Carolina with gusty winds, drenching rainfall and rough seas, but Arthur never made an official landfall.
Following Bertha, the next name on the list of tropical storms in the Atlantic for the 2020 season is Cristobal.
AccuWeather's long-range forecasters remained concerned for a busy Atlantic hurricane season, which includes the likelihood of several significant storms of impact on the U.S. amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Concerns for the new coronavirus were already complicating plans for hurricane shelters as officials prepared for the hurricane season ahead.
Keep checking back on AccuWeather.com and stay tuned to the AccuWeather Network on DirecTV, Frontier and Verizon Fios.
Report a Typo