Community Corner

Tropical Storm Andrea to Drench Jersey Shore on Friday

The first named storm of the year is on a northward track from the Gulf of Mexico.

The first week of the official hurricane season produced the first named storm of the year, Tropical Storm Andrea, but the region is not expected to see strong winds from the system — only heavy rain likely to start in the wee hours of Friday morning (June 7).

Andrea was named by the National Hurricane Center on Wednesday when its average wind speeds surpassed 39 mph.

As of 6 p.m. Wednesday, Andrea's maximum sustained winds were 40 mph (with stronger gusts) as it moved across the Gulf of Mexico. The storm is expected to reach the Gulf Coast of Florida on Thursday afternoon, then move over southeastern Georgia and coastal South Carolina on Thursday night and Friday.

Find out what's happening in Barnegat-Manahawkinfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The predicted track of the storm heads out to sea as it passes the region Friday night into Saturday.

Andrea is not expected to strengthen, and communities such as Ocean City, Long Beach Township and Point Pleasant have little chance of seeing tropical-force winds. The storm is likely to weaken and lose its tropical designation as it moves north over colder water.

Find out what's happening in Barnegat-Manahawkinfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

But the storm is expected to dump as much as 8 inches of rain on parts of Florida and Georgia.

Showers are likely to start after 2 a.m. Friday, according to the National Weather Service forecast. The heaviest rain is expected to fall on Friday afternoon into Friday night.

"Despite the fact that South Jersey is within the forecast track, the ONLY impact I'm expecting here is heavy rain," NBC40 meteorologist Dan Skeldon wrote in a Wednesday update. " '1 to 2' (inches) likely for lots of South Jersey on Friday ... localized higher amounts possible. So the remnants of Andrea will be a rainmaker as it comes up the coast, and nothing else. Tidal flooding or tropical storm force winds ARE NOT expected here in South Jersey."

A 50 percent chance of rain continues into Saturday, but the weather begins to clear from there.

High tides on Friday at the Ninth Street Bridge are 8:09 a.m. and 8:23 p.m. The NOAA does not predict any extreme tides for Friday. See the tide forecast for Atlantic City.

The surf reports are mixed on whether or not some beaches will see any significant swell from the passing storm.

The best shot for good conditions would be on Saturday morning with the storm passing closest and an offshore wind predicted locally.

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