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Will there be a Tropical Storm Nadine after Milton? Here's what forecasters are watching

Ahead of Milton's landfall Wednesday, forecasters are tracking another disturbance in the Atlantic about 300 miles from Bermuda.
Credit: National Hurricane Center

TAMPA, Fla. — Ahead of Hurricane Milton’s landfall, the National Hurricane Center is also monitoring another disturbance off Florida’s east coast.

Milton is expected to make landfall on the Gulf Coast of Florida late Wednesday as a major hurricane. Milton waffled between Category 4 and 5 strength since Tuesday before it slightly weakened to a Category 3 storm on Wednesday. The National Hurricane Center said landfall is expected sometime Wednesday night along the Gulf Coast.

The National Hurricane Center said it’s also monitoring another possible storm in the Atlantic about 300 miles from Bermuda in an advisory Wednesday.

The NHC said there’s a 30% chance that the disturbance will form a cyclone in the next two to seven days.

“Environmental conditions are becoming less favorable for tropical or subtropical development today while the low moves northeastward to east-northeastward at around 15 mph,” the National Hurricane Center said. “Upper-level winds are expected to become too strong for further development tonight or on Thursday.”        

The system is not yet named because it isn’t strong enough, but the next named storm this year would be Nadine.

Hurricane Leslie is also in the North Atlantic and is forecast to continue its path away from the U.S., according to the National Hurricane Center.

There have been 13 named storms so far this hurricane season, which ends Nov. 30 in the Atlantic.

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