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Tropical Storm Olga forms in northwestern Gulf of Mexico

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Tropical Storm Olga has formed in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico, but will only last a few hours, however, before it merges with a cold front that's almost on top of it.

Just ahead of the front, the upper-level winds are favorable enough for Olgaā€™s winds to reach 40 mph, but the strong cold front that moved off the Texas coast this morning, along with strong and hostile upper-level winds, will erase the tropical aspects of the storm as the front and Olgaā€™s circulation merge.

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The combo system will be a wintertime-type low-pressure system with winds still over 40 mph, which will bring gusty winds and heavy rain to Louisiana and Mississippi, and then points farther north. Ā The systemā€™s changeover later today to non-tropical will not change the nasty weather along the northwestern Gulf coast.

The Texas cold front will move toward Florida, but not make it. Ā A high-pressure system over Florida and the Bahamas is continuing to block fronts from pushing through Florida. Ā The consensus of the computer forecast models is this the pattern wonā€™t change in any significant way through next week. Ā 

On the other side the Atlantic, tiny Tropical Storm Pablo has formed near the Azores Islands off Portugal. Ā Itā€™s forecast to move through the island chain as a tropical storm tomorrow and then die in the North Atlantic.


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