An area of thunderstorms over the western Caribbean Sea developed into Tropical Storm Sara Thursday afternoon.
Read more: Potential Tropical Cyclone 19 forms. Could it impact Florida? How?
Friday morning, Sara is hugging the coast of Honduras and slowly moving westward toward Belize.
Meteorologist Megan Borowski from the Florida Public Radio Emergency Network said that the storm will remain in the vicinity of Central America and the Yucatan peninsula through the weekend.
"Although Sara isn’t strong, it is going to produce heavy rains over the coast of Honduras over the next several days, and that’s thanks in part to its very slow forward motion. We do expect the system to track into the Yucatan peninsula early next week, and it’ll weaken into a tropical depression or remnant low if it does indeed follow that forecast track, Borowski said.
"Now by the middle of the week, the remnants of Sara should get picked up by steering winds and dragged northeastward through the Gulf. Although there still remains uncertainty this far out in the forecast, the remnants the storm could produce heavy rain for parts of Florida by the middle to end of next week."
Megan said that details regarding rain intensity and timing for next week are still unknown, but should become more clear early next week.
Copyright 2024 WUSF 89.7