Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (2024)

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Hurricane Central At a Glance

Hurricane Central

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less than an hour ago

Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (1)

At a Glance

  • Hurricane Beryl is now in the eastern Caribbean Sea after hammering the Windard Islands.
  • It's a threat to Jamaica, the Cayman Islands and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula this week.
  • It's still too soon to tell where it will track in the southwest Gulf of Mexico this weekend.
  • There's one more system behind Beryl in the Atlantic we're watching.

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Hurricane Beryl is plowing westward in the Caribbean Sea after a historic Windward Islands landfall with destructive winds, storm surge and flooding rainfall.

Current status: The center of Hurricane Beryl and its most intense eyewall winds are cruising away from the Windward Islands, moving west-northwest. Any lingering bands of heavy showers will gradually diminish, including over the hardest hit areas of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, as well as Grenada.

Historic landfall: Beryl made landfall just after 11 a.m. EDT Monday over the Grenadan island of Carriacou with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph. Among only two other Category 4 hurricanes in history near Grenada and St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Beryl was the strongest by wind speed.

(​MORE: All The Ways Beryl Has Already Made History)

Storm reports: S​torm chasers Brandon Clement and Jonathan Petramala reported the roof ripped off of a building they were reporting from on Carriacou Island late Monday morning as the eyewall moved in. The National Hurricane Center's 11 a.m. EDT Monday advisory cited "multiple reports of downed trees, flooded streets, power outages and storm surge flooding in the Grenadines, Grenada, Barbados and Tobago."

After briefly weakening to a Category 3 overnight following an eyewall replacement cycle, the hurricane once again returned to Category 4 strength Monday morning.

I​ts wind field grew larger since Sunday, with hurricane-force winds now extending out up to 40 miles from Beryl's center.

While its eyewall passed south of Barbados, a 69 mph gust was clocked early Monday at Grantley Adams International Airport, the island's major airport. Grenada clocked a wind gust up to 121 mph as the center of Beryl tracked just north of the island. A gust to 64 mph was reported on St. Lucia, as well.

W​atches and warnings: All warnings have been dropped in the Windward Islands. T​he remaining watches and warnings are shown on the map below.

Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (3)

What's next in the Caribbean: We expect Beryl to take a general west-northwest track in the Caribbean Sea through the rest of this week.

On this track, B​eryl's outer impacts, including bands of rain, some storm surge flooding and tropical storm force winds could brush southern Hispaniola Tuesday into early Wednesday.

It poses the danger of surge flooding, damaging winds and rainfall flooding in what could be a very close pass near or over Jamaica Wednesday.

(​MORE: What The Forecast Cone Means, And Doesn't)

Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (4)

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Yucatan threat: Later this week, Beryl is expected to face increasing wind shear in the western Caribbean Sea, usually a factor that disrupts hurricanes.

W​hile that is expected to induce some weakening of Beryl, it is still expected to be a hurricane until its landfall in the Yucatan Peninsula or Belize around Friday.

Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (5)

A​ny U.S. concern? High pressure over the Southeast should protect the eastern U.S. Gulf Coast from Beryl by this weekend.

However, if Beryl emerges into the southwest Gulf of Mexico this weekend, some model tracks eventually take Beryl into eastern Mexico by early next week.

However, it's not out of the question Beryl could take a subtle northward jog early next week if that Southeast U.S. ridge moves away or weakens just enough.

T​he bottom line: All interests around the Caribbean Sea, including from Hispaniola, Jamaica and the Cayman Islands to the Yucatan Peninsula, should monitor the forecast of Beryl closely over the next several days and have their hurricane plans ready to go.

R​esidents along the Gulf Coast from eastern Mexico to Texas should, for now, monitor the forecasts in the coming days.

That's not all we're watching: There is another tropical disturbance in the Atlantic Basin, as depicted in the map below.

The system is in the far eastern Atlantic Ocean and has been dubbed Invest 96L by the NHC. It has a medium chance of development this week, and will remain over the open ocean until nearing the Windward Islands around the middle of this week, just a couple of days after Beryl's devastating strike.

(​MORE: What Is An Invest?)

Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (6)

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Hurricane Beryl Could Impact Jamaica Next | Weather.com (2024)
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