Tropical storm warnings extended to North Carolina as the chantal approaches

Photo: TS Chantal Radar

Tropical storm warnings have spread to Surf City, North Carolina, since the tropical chantal storm is on the high seas from the southeast of the United States on Saturday, according to the National Hurricane Center.

At 2 in the morning on Sunday, the storm was a little stronger than it had been hours before, with its maximum sustained winds increased to 60 mph as it moved north to approximately 8 mph.

The Chantal center was located at that time at about 75 miles to the east-northeast of Charleston, South Carolina, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The scattered rains and the thunderstorms of the outer bands of Chantal were affecting portions of the southern coast and North Carolina on Saturday night, along with the increase in rough waves and the dangerous residence currents.

Photo: TS Chantal Radar

The conditions will continue to deteriorate in the next few hours as the storm approaches the coast. Little additional change is expected in force before the earth, which will probably occur before dawn.

The conditions of the tropical storm were expected to begin on Saturday night for parts of the Carolina coast from the South Santee river to Surf City, where the warning of tropical storm is in force.

Photo: TS chantal prognosis track
Photo: TS Chantal Alerts

Heavy rains through coastal carolinas will cause some sudden floods until Monday, with total rain of 2 to 4 inches and local amounts of up to 6 inches are expected for the Carolinas.

Chantal will bring a smaller storm wave for parts of the coast of Carolina, with between 1 and 3 feet as possible storm for coastal areas under tropical storm warning.

The system is also expected to bring surfings and currents of sink in decrease life along parts of the east coast from the northeast of Florida to the states of the average Atlantic during the next few days.

This image provided by NOAA shows the tropical chantal storm forming on the coast of Las Carolinas on July 5, 2025.

It is no longer a VIIA to

The third storm named of the Atlantic Hurricanes Season is formed on average around August 3, according to the National Hurricane Center.

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