As torrents of rain moved ashore the northern Gulf Coast early Saturday, the National Hurricane Center declared Tropical Storm Claudette had formed over southeast Louisiana, the third named storm of the 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Center.

The storm has already brought flooding rains, inundating coastal southeast Louisiana, southern Alabama and Mississippi and the Florida Panhandle. It’s next poised to sweep across the Southeast, through central Alabama and Georgia into Sunday and through the Carolinas by Monday, bringing more heavy rain and the possibility of a few tornadoes.

Through Saturday afternoon, the Hurricane Center warned of “heavy rainfall and life-threatening flash flooding across coastal Mississippi and Alabama, and the far western Florida Panhandle.” Rainfall amounts of 5 to 10 inches, with isolated 15-inch totals, are possible.

Claudette is a minimal tropical storm with maximum sustained winds of 40 mph, having formed about 45 miles southwest of New Orleans around 5 a.m. Saturday. As of 11 a.m. Saturday, it was centered 95 miles west-northwest of Mobile and headed west-northwest at 14 mph.

While a low-end tropical storm, it was drawing a tremendous amount of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico inland.

In a special bulletin early Saturday morning, the National Weather Service noted rainfall rates as high as 2 to 3.5 inches per hour were occurring in the most intense thunderstorms over coastal Alabama and the western Florida Panhandle, where flash flood warnings were posted.

As of late Saturday morning, some of the heaviest rain had progressed into central Alabama from Montgomery to Birmingham. Flash flood watches covered an extensive zone from extreme eastern Louisiana, southern Mississippi, the southern two-thirds of Alabama and central Georgia, including Atlanta.

Embedded within the rainbands, some thunderstorms were rotating, prompting numerous tornado warnings in central and eastern Alabama. Tornado watches covered much of southern Alabama, the Florida Panhandle and southwest Georgia into the evening Saturday.

Social media photos showed tornado damage apparent in East Brewton, about 60 miles east-northeast of Mobile.

As the storm came ashore early Saturday morning, it also produced high seas and dangerous surf. Waters levels were predicted to be elevated two to three feet above normally dry land due to storm surge from southeast Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle. Observations confirmed this around Mobile Bay as well as parts of southeast Louisiana and coastal Mississippi, including around Bay St. Louis.

The storm’s heaviest rainfall Friday through Saturday morning focused just to the east of New Orleans. While about 2 to 3 inches were reported around the Big Easy, amounts up to 8 inches were observed in Slidell, La., just to the northeast across Lake Pontchartrain.

Wind gusts of up to 43 mph were clocked in New Orleans and as high as 59 mph in Gulfport, Miss.

With the storm moving inland, inland rain is expected to be the most widespread hazard along and east of the storm track.

“[H]eavy rain will occur across central Alabama, central and northern Georgia, and into the Piedmont of the Carolinas, resulting in rainfall totals of 3 to 6 inches with isolated maximum amounts of 8 inches,” the Hurricane Center wrote. “Flash, urban, small stream and isolated minor river flooding impacts are possible.”

While forecast to weaken to a tropical depression by late Saturday, it may begin to restrengthen as it nears the North Carolina coast Sunday night into Monday. As such the Hurricane Center has issued a tropical storm watch for much of coastal North Carolina, where wind gusts of 40 to 60 mph, heavy rain, and elevated seas are quite possible.

According to Phil Klotzbach, a hurricane expert at Colorado State University, Claudette is the firth earliest third named storm on record since 1950. The 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season is forecast to be an active one, with 13 to 20 named storms according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


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