Issue link: https://newsleader.uberflip.com/i/218481
Sarasota News Leader November 29, 2013 14 Sept., 6 p.m.: Ingrid is now the second hurricane of the Atlantic season, with 85 mph sustained winds. While it had the necessary wind speed, the storm looks nothing like a traditional hurricane in satellite photos. But it is dropping heavy rain on northeastern Mexico. Page 65 a two-day wonder. Thousands of miles away, Ingrid also spent two days as a hurricane. A tropical storm named Jerry has formed, again in the mid-Atlantic and on much the same track as Humberto and Gabrielle. And there is an area of "disturbed weather" that could develop into something later this week. It is now southwest of Jamaica and heading 16 Sept., 4 p.m.: Ingrid comes ashore in northwest, away from us. northeast Mexico as a tropical storm and rapidly weakens back into a tropical depression: another two-day hurricane. 3 Oct., 5 p.m.: Jerry is going down and going nowhere. But that "disturbed weather" patch has turned into Tropical Storm Karen, now 1 Oct., 8 a.m.: Yes, the peak of the season just off the northern Yucatan coast. has come and gone and still no real activity. Humberto briefly became a hurricane in the Winds are 65 mph, and the storm is expected mid-Atlantic, turning north and then northeast to go to hurricane strength tomorrow but sag to nowhere. The season's first hurricane was back down to tropical storm level by landfall, A graphic shows the projected path of Tropical Storm Karen in early October. Image courtesy NHC