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  • TD Sally continues to drop heavy rain through the Southeast

    Pam Knox

    September 16, 2020

    As of Wednesday night, Sally has weakened to a depression and is slowly moving off to the northeast. It will continue to move through Georgia and the Carolinas on Thursday and Friday, dropping rain that could be as much as 10 inches in some places as it continues to move to the northeast at an…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Tropical weather
  • Alabama farmers brace for Sally as pecan, cotton harvest nears

    Pam Knox

    September 16, 2020

    A recent Farm Press article gives a good description of how Hurricane Sally is expected to affect crops in Alabama. Cotton and pecans are the most likely to be affected because they are still a month from harvest and need good conditions to reach harvest successfully. The heavy rain and winds are likely to cause…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Tropical weather
  • The latest on Hurricane Sally

    Pam Knox

    September 16, 2020

    As of 11 pm Tuesday night, Hurricane Sally is creeping north towards the east side of Mobile Bay in Alabama. It is expected to make landfall over the next few hours, but timing is tough when it is only moving at 2 mph. The slow movement is piling up water to the east of the…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Tropical weather
  • Heavy rains from Hurricane Sally will cause flash flooding in Alabama and Georgia

    Pam Knox

    September 14, 2020

    Rains of over 15 inches could occur in southern Alabama as slow-moving Hurricane Sally moves onshore, most likely early Wednesday near the MS-AL border. A wide band of rainfall of 6-10 inches is currently predicted to stretch north through central Alabama and on into northern Georgia, the South Carolina highlands, and parts of western North…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Tropical weather
  • Beware of heat-related illnesses after flooding and natural disasters

    Pam Knox

    September 14, 2020

    While all of us are watching the progress of Hurricane Sally carefully and considering how much rain it might drop, here is some advice from Farm Press about the rise in heat-related illnesses after a major disaster in the South when power is out for long time periods. Lack of air conditioning in areas where…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Health
  • NCCO: Florence, our wettest hurricane, two years later

    Pam Knox

    September 14, 2020

    Two years ago today, Hurricane Florence made landfall in North Carolina. It was a very slow-moving storm and dropped a tremendous amount of rainfall on coastal North Carolina. The North Carolina Climate Office released a 2-year retrospective today which summarizes the storm, including the wind, surge and rainfall. You can read it at https://climate.ncsu.edu/climateblog?id=324&h=5666e5c1.

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate summaries, History, Tropical weather
  • Soon-to-be Hurricane Sally expected to impact the Southeast this week

    Pam Knox

    September 13, 2020

    Last Friday it was not even a named storm. Today Sally is a tropical storm which is expected to become a hurricane on Monday and make landfall as a category 2 hurricane near New Orleans sometime on Tuesday morning. It is a slow mover, which means that it will pile up a lot of storm…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Tropical weather
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The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

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