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Tropical Storm Chris forms off the Carolinas, generating dangerous surf

 
CAPTION: (St. Petersburg, 05/23/2005) Rain drops reflect an American flag painted on the side of Southern Sound Music Company on Fourth Street in St. Petersburg Tuesday morning. Note: Picture taken thru the back window of photog's car. Times photo by John Pendygraft
CAPTION: (St. Petersburg, 05/23/2005) Rain drops reflect an American flag painted on the side of Southern Sound Music Company on Fourth Street in St. Petersburg Tuesday morning. Note: Picture taken thru the back window of photog's car. Times photo by John Pendygraft
Published July 8, 2018

Chris, the third storm of the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season, was named Sunday morning as it gained strength off the coast of the Carolinas. The storm is forecast to intensify into a hurricane over the next several days but remain off the coast before zipping off toward Newfoundland late in the week.

The storm, 150 miles south of Cape Hatteras, packs maximum sustained winds of 40 mph. It is nearly stationary, and little movement is expected through Tuesday. As a result, it is forecast to continue generating life-threatening waves and rip currents for the Mid-Atlantic beaches. A man died in the rough surf in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, on Saturday, when Chris was still a tropical depression.

As the storm is positioned over very warm ocean waters, it is forecast to steadily strengthen over the next 72 hours and become a hurricane between Tuesday and Wednesday.

At that point, a cold front should absorb Chris and rapidly sweep it to the north-northeast toward Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. It should gradually weaken as it moves over cooler water.

As the third named storm of the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season, Chris developed more than a month ahead of normal. On average, the third storm forms Aug. 13, said Phil Klotzbach, a tropical weather researcher at Colorado State University and Capital Weather Gang contributor.

Elsewhere in the tropical Atlantic, Beryl - once a hurricane - has weakened substantially on approach to the Lesser Antilles. It is now a minimal tropical storm, with peak winds of 40 mph. The storm is, however, forecast to maintain this strength as it heads west over the next day, prompting tropical storm warnings for Dominica and Guadeloupe, where gusty winds and one to three inches of rain are possible.

By Tuesday, the storm is forecast to degenerate but could still produce some gusty winds and heavy rain over Puerto Rico and Hispaniola.

McNoldy noted the simultaneous presence of two July tropical storms, Beryl and Chris, hasn't happened since 2011, when Bret and Cindy roamed the Atlantic.