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Update: Evacuations called for the Keys as it remains in Tropical Storm Laura?s path


National Hurricane Center
The National Hurricane Center
Colorado State University
CONUS
NHC
HWRF
the South Florida Water Management District
ECMWF
HMON
@BMcNoldy
TD
The Climate Prediction Center’s
Digital
© Gannett Co., Inc.
Creative Commons
The Palm Beach Post
| USA TODAY


Laura
Ron Desantis
Marco

DeSantis
Phil Klotzbach
Bertha
Fay
Hanna
Isaias
Philip Klotzbach
Keys
Todd Kimberlain
Brian McNoldy
Nana
Hurricane Luis
Z. Klotzbach
Beulah
@Kmillerweather
S. Dixie Highway



South Florida
Greek


the Treasure Coast
the Florida Peninsula
Gulf of Mexico
South Florida
the Gulf of Mexico
Atlantic
Leeward Islands
the Florida Straits
GFS
the Yucatan Peninsula


The


Palm Beach County

Panhandle
U.S.
US
Cristobal
Puerto Rico
British Virgin Islands
Bahamas
South Florida
Cuba
Louisiana
Honduras
Texas
Treasure Coast
Brownsville
West Palm Beach
FL
California


Tropical Depression
Hurricane Maria

Positivity     40.00%   
   Negativity   60.00%
The New York Times
SOURCE: https://www.palmbeachpost.com/article/20200821/NEWS/200829939
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Summary

As of the 11 a.m. advisory, all of Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast are out of the cone.A forecast track change at the 11 a.m. advisory pushed Tropical Storm Laura south — a move that takes most of the Florida Peninsula out of the forecast track but does skim the southwest coast. The National Hurricane Center is forecasting that Laura and a second tropical depression will reach hurricane strength and share the Gulf of Mexico at the same time. The official forecast calls for Laura to be a strong tropical storm near South Florida as it cuts through the Keys and into the Gulf of Mexico, where it is forecast to become a Category 1 hurricane with 75-mph winds. Tropical-storm force winds extended 150 miles from the center of Laura on Friday afternoon. Tropical Depression 14, which was off the coast of Honduras early Friday and expected to become a tropical storm before hitting the Yucatan Peninsula, is forecast to weaken slightly in the southern Gulf of Mexico but reach hurricane strength briefly before making a landfall Tuesday as a tropical storm in Texas or far eastern Louisiana. Klotzbach said there is no record of two hurricanes existing in the Gulf of Mexico at the same time, but there is precedent for two tropical cyclones — hurricane, storm or depression — to occupy the space together.

As said here by Kimberly Miller