Central Florida, heat advisory in effect
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While the National Hurricane Center's map is lit up with a tropical disturbance, Saturday's forecast is much more about the heat index.
The weather forecast for Florida on Sunday is shaping up much the same as it did Saturday. Protect yourself from the blazing heat.
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FOX 35 Orlando on MSNFOX 35 Weather Impact Day: Triple digit temperatures continue to conclude the weekendDew points in the middle to upper 70s will make it feel more like the upper 100s, which is why we have another IMPACT DAY. Heat Advisories go into effect at noon and last until 6 PM. Think hydration and light-colored clothing. This ridge of high pressure has been dominating our weather pattern, keeping things mainly dry and steamy.
A tropical trough moving across the Florida Peninsula will pull moisture across the state, leading to significant rainfall in southeast Florida.
The National Hurricane Center said July 14 it is tracking a system off the Atlantic coast of Florida that could bring heavy rain to the area.
Tampa Bay airports warned Monday by Florida’s chief law enforcement officer to comply with a state law passed this year that bans weather modification are still untangling the new set of rules, officials said.
The threat of significant flooding across South Florida has passed for now, as rainfall totals on Monday came in within forecasted expectations.
The system’s slow passage over Florida has meant days of rain throughout the state, leading to street flooding in South Florida. However, the Miami office of the National Weather Service expects the rain to slow down, alleviating any concerns about deep flooding.
A weather system moving across Florida wasn’t even a tropical something but it has the potential to develop into a tropical depression as it moves across the Gulf later in the week.
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FOX 35 Orlando on MSNRainfall totals: How much rain did Invest 93L bring to Orlando, Central Florida?Invest 93L dropped several inches of rain – nearly 9" in some spots – as it crossed Florida this week, before eventually pushing out into the Gulf.
Florida's Attorney General James Uthmeier jumped in to amplify the misinformation - citing a newly passed Florida law banning loosely defined "weather modification" practices that climatologists say have nothing to do with increasingly severe weather events.