Low pressure, tropical system could form

HOLT, Fla., June 29, 2025—The 2025 Atlantic Hurricane season is starting to show some life.

National Hurricane Center is keeping an eye on an area of low pressure that could develop from a remnant frontal boundary near the southeast Atlantic coast or eastern Gulf coast.

Some gradual tropical or subtropical development could occur as it drifts slowly just off the U.S. coastline. The NHC gives it a 20 percent chance of development through the next seven days.

Should a tropical system form, it would be the third system of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season.

Tropical Storm Andrea formed from a low pressure east-southeast of Bermuda over the central Atlantic June 22. A brief storm, it trekked northeast before degenerating into a remnant low.

More recently, Tropical Storm Barry formed this morning over the Bay of Campeche according to data from an Air Force Reserve Hurricane Hunter mission.

Barry is forecast to make landfall as a tropical storm before moving over east Mexico later tonight, according to the NHC.

Regardless of where, when or if the possible low develops into a tropical depression, the northwest panhandle can expect rain tomorrow through Tuesday with chances at 90 percent.

Scattered-to-numerous thunderstorms are forecast for the next couple of days. A few could produce gusty downburst winds, according to the National Weather Service in Mobile.

These slow-moving storms will likely produce heavy rains with higher rainfall amounts over the western panhandle, according to the NWS.

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