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Ophelia deteriorates over Virginia

Winds relax as Ophelia moves inland

Ophelia deteriorates over Virginia

Winds relax as Ophelia moves inland

WE’RE GOING TO SEE SOME PENGUINS SOON ON THE FIRST DAY OF FALL. CONDITIONS ARE CERTAINLY STARTING TO GET A LITTLE CHILLY OUT THERE. YOU MAY HAVE NOTICED THAT TODAY HIGH TEMPERATURES DID NOT GET OUT OF THE LOWER 60S DUE TO OPHELIA THAT HAS NOW BEEN DOWNGRADED TO A TROPICAL DEPRESSION AS OF THE 8:00 PM ADVISORY, THE STORM REALLY STARTING TO SEE THAT RAIN FADING OUT OVER THE TRIAD. WE’VE BEEN TELLING YOU FOR A COUPLE OF DAYS IT WOULD TAPER DOWN DURING THE EVENING. WE’VE STILL GOT SOME SHOWERY WEATHER AROUND. IT’S NOT OVER YET, BUT GIVE IT A FEW MORE HOURS AND THE STORM WILL START TO PULL AWAY. LOOKING AT A FIRST WARNING RADAR AND SOME DECENT RAIN FROM GREENSBORO STRETCHED UP TO MARTINSVILLE. STILL, SCATTERED SHOWERS REMAIN OVER ROCKINGHAM COUNTY AND A LITTLE BIT OF A BLIP NORTH OF WESTFIELD, RIGHT ON THE BORDER WITH VIRGINIA IN NORTHERN SURRY COUNTY. A FEW LEFTOVER SHOWERS DOWN SOUTH SOUTHERN RANDOLPH COUNTY GETTING CLOSE TO THE ZOO. MAYBE SOME FLAMINGOS THERE, TOO. CONDITIONS CERTAINLY WERE MUCH WETTER OVER THE EASTERN PART OF THE TRIAD, CLOSER TO THE CENTER OF THAT STORM AND THE PERSISTENT RAIN THROUGH THE EVENING HOURS TONIGHT OVER THE EASTERN HALF REALLY ADDED TO THOSE RAIN. RAINFALL TOTALS NEARING AN INCH AT SHILOH AIRPORT IN ROCKINGHAM COUNTY, 7/10 OF AN INCH IN GREENSBORO. IN STARK CONTRAST TO THAT, JUST UNDER A THIRD OF AN INCH IN WINSTON-SALEM. SO EASTERN AREAS CERTAINLY GOT SOME GOOD RAINS. THE BIG WINNERS, THOUGH, WERE FARTHER EAST, CHERRY POINT, 3.6IN OF RAIN OVER THE LAST TWO DAYS, ABOUT THREE AND A HALF AT HATTERAS, RALEIGH RICHMOND CLOSING IN IN ABOUT 2.75IN OF RAIN TOTALS IN NORFOLK, UP NEAR GREENVILLE ARE OUT NEAR GREENVILLE, I SHOULD SAY ABOUT TWO AND ONE HALF INCHES WILMINGTON KILL DEVIL HILLS ABOUT 1 TO 2IN AS WELL. GUSTS WERE SUBSTANTIAL CHERRY POINT WE MENTIONED FOR HIGH RAINS. ALSO HAS THE PEAK GUST THAT WE’VE SEEN SO FAR TODAY. 60 MILE AN HOUR. THAT WAS PRETTY CLOSE TO THE LANDFALL POINT IN EMERALD ISLE THAT CAME IN ABOUT 615 THIS MORNING. HATTERAS ABOUT 52 MILE AN HOUR GUST, LOCAL GUSTS WERE NOT AS HIGH AND THEY PEAKED DURING THE EARLY MORNING HOURS LAST NIGHT. WE GOT INTO THE 40S IN DANVILLE AND A 43 MILE PER HOUR GUST MEASURED ABOUT 2 A.M. IN BURLINGTON. AND THEY’VE BEEN PRETTY TAME AFTER A BREEZY MORNING. THE WINDS HAVE REALLY SUBSIDED. FIRST, CERTAINLY BIGGER RAINFALL ELEMENT ACROSS THE EASTERN PARTS OF THE AREA. YOUR TRIAD FORECAST AS WE LOOK AHEAD. TEMPERATURES IN THE 50S TOMORROW MORNING, HIGHS IN THE MID 70S DURING THE AFTERNOON. WE’LL CALL IT MIXED SKIES FOR TOMORROW. I THINK THERE’LL BE INTERVALS OF CLOUDS AND SUNSHINE. A HIGH NEAR 74 IN THE FOOTHILLS WITH A NORTHWEST WIND AT FIVE. AND THEN ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN WEST, HIGH TEMPERATURES LIKELY NOT GETTING OUT OF THE MID 60S TOMORROW, NORTHWEST WINDS AT 5 TO 10 AS WELL. JUST AS WE’RE STARTING TO SEE THE END OF OPHELIA. WE HAVE ANOTHER STORM BREWING IN THE TROPICS. THIS IS PHILIPPE, A BRAND NEW TROPICAL STORM BORN A COUPLE OF HOURS AGO, 40 MILE AN HOUR WINDS AND MOVING PRETTY QUICKLY TO THE WEST AT 14, NOT QUITE AS ORGANIZED, BUT THE NUMBER OF STORMS AROUND THAT CENTER STARTING TO GROW. THIS IS GETTING BETTER ORGANIZED GRADUALLY. THIS IS EXPECTED TO TAKE A SIMILAR TRACK, THAT KIND OF LONG TRACK, BUT TURN A LOT EARLIER AS IT STARTS TO FEEL A CHANGE IN THE STEERING WINDS, GRADUAL STRENGTHENING IS EXPECTED FROM THIS, BUT THIS SHOULD TURN LONG BEFORE IT GETS TO THE UNITED STATES AND MOVE INTO THE CENTRAL ATLANTIC. SO WE ARE THANKFUL FOR THAT TROPICAL SEASON. SO FAR, WE’VE HAD 16 NAMED STORMS ALREADY, SIX OF THOSE HAVE BEEN HURRICANES KIND OF QUIETLY BUILDING THOSE NUMBERS VERY QUICKLY. IN FACT, IF YOU LOOK AT THE LIST OF TROPICAL NAMES THIS YEAR, WE’VE GOT FIVE NAMES LEFT. THAT’S IT. AND A WHOLE LOT OF SEASON LEFT TO GET MORE THAN TWO MONTHS LEFT TO GO. SO TYPICALLY, THINGS START TO SLOW DOWN ONCE WE GET PAST MID-OCTOBER. AND THANKFULLY, THAT’S ONLY A COUPLE OF WEEKS AWAY. SO I’M HOPEFUL. I’M TIRED, MAN. IT’S WEARING ME OUT THIS SEASON. CONDITIONS OVER THE AREA NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS STARTING TO GET WARMER. HIGH, CLOSE TO 80 DEGREES ON MONDAY. WE’RE BACK IN THE 60S WITH SOME RAIN CHANCES AND A NORTHEAST WIND, BUT THAT SHOULD SET UP A REALLY NICE WEEKEND NE
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Ophelia deteriorates over Virginia

Winds relax as Ophelia moves inland

Ophelia has been downgraded to a tropical depression. The storm made landfall as a strong tropical storm near Emerald Isle around 6:15 a.m. Saturday, with peak sustained winds of 70 mph.►Tracking Tropical Storm Ophelia: Latest track, spaghetti modelsHeavy, persistent rains along with Ophelia's storm surge caused several parts of eastern North Carolina to flood on Saturday. While scattered flooding is expected to persist into Sunday along rivers and in communities adjacent to Pamlico Sound, most flood advisories and North Carolina Tropical Storm Warnings have expired.►Download the Very Local app for updates on the coming storm WINDSThe strongest winds began to die down Saturday afternoon once Ophelia moved inland into Virginia. The strongest gusts in the Triad exceeded 40 mph early Saturday morning.The strongest gusts were measured near the coast, where Ophelia made landfall early Saturday morning.WEEKEND RAINFALL Rainfall totals have varied from just a trace of rain in some western communities to more than a half inch of rain over the Eastern Triad. As of 8:00 PM Saturday, Danville, Virginia collected more than one-point-six inches of rain since late Friday. Light rain will continue to increase those totals into Saturday night.While closer to the coast, Ophelia dumped and average of two to four inches of rain, with localized totals nearing five inches. The volume of rain has created considerable runoff into creeks, streams, and mainstem rivers rises in eastern North Carolina, where water levels may rise over the next few days.WHAT'S NEXTImproving weather Saturday night and Sunday as the storm moves away. The chance for showers returns midweek.More weather coverage: Weather Alerts | Closing and delays | Latest weather forecast | Post pictures to the uLocal North Carolina Facebook Group | Traffic information | Report closings and delays | SkyCams | Download the WXII12 News mobile app

Ophelia has been downgraded to a tropical depression. The storm made landfall as a strong tropical storm near Emerald Isle around 6:15 a.m. Saturday, with peak sustained winds of 70 mph.

►Tracking Tropical Storm Ophelia: Latest track, spaghetti models

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Heavy, persistent rains along with Ophelia's storm surge caused several parts of eastern North Carolina to flood on Saturday. While scattered flooding is expected to persist into Sunday along rivers and in communities adjacent to Pamlico Sound, most flood advisories and North Carolina Tropical Storm Warnings have expired.

►Download the Very Local app for updates on the coming storm

WINDS

The strongest winds began to die down Saturday afternoon once Ophelia moved inland into Virginia. The strongest gusts in the Triad exceeded 40 mph early Saturday morning.

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The strongest gusts were measured near the coast, where Ophelia made landfall early Saturday morning.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

WEEKEND RAINFALL

Rainfall totals have varied from just a trace of rain in some western communities to more than a half inch of rain over the Eastern Triad. As of 8:00 PM Saturday, Danville, Virginia collected more than one-point-six inches of rain since late Friday. Light rain will continue to increase those totals into Saturday night.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

While closer to the coast, Ophelia dumped and average of two to four inches of rain, with localized totals nearing five inches. The volume of rain has created considerable runoff into creeks, streams, and mainstem rivers rises in eastern North Carolina, where water levels may rise over the next few days.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

WHAT'S NEXT

Improving weather Saturday night and Sunday as the storm moves away. The chance for showers returns midweek.

More weather coverage: Weather Alerts | Closing and delays | Latest weather forecast | Post pictures to the uLocal North Carolina Facebook Group | Traffic information | Report closings and delays | SkyCams | Download the WXII12 News mobile app