Jerry is moving away from the Caribbean, but we also have our eyes on another disturbance in the central Atlantic. Here's the ...
A storm without a name was expected to bring flooding to the East Coast from South Carolina to New Jersey and high winds to ...
The National Hurricane Center gives a medium chance an Atlantic system could be the next tropical depression or storm while ...
First Karen and then Jerry, both short-lived tropical storms fizzled in cooler Atlantic waters. Here's what's being watched ...
A storm without a name will bring flooding to the East Coast from South Carolina to New Jersey and high winds to New York City over the holiday weekend.
At 11 a.m. Saturday, the National Hurricane Center issued an advisory stating that Tropical Storm Jerry is in the Atlantic ...
A low-pressure system off the coast will push showers our direction this weekend. Clouds will increase through Saturday ...
No. Tropical Storm Jerry is no longer expected to strengthen into a hurricane, according to the National Hurricane Center.
A central Atlantic tropical wave extends from near 21N40W to near 10N42W. It is moving westward around 15 kt. Scattered moderate to isolated strong convection is south-southwest of the wave from 09N ...
The National Hurricane Center's 5 a.m. Saturday advisory reported that Tropical Storm Jerry is in the Atlantic Ocean, 435 ...
Subtropical Storm Karen was downgraded to a post-tropical low and Tropical Storm Jerry was bringing heavy rain and 60 mph winds as it moved north.