Bonnie Brings Heavy Rain and Flooding to South Carolina

Even though Bonnie weakened to a tropical depression before it made landfall near Charleston, it brought locally heavy rain and flooding to parts of South Carolina and eastern Georgia.  A portion of Interstate 95 was closed due to high water.  At 11:00 p.m. EDT on Sunday the center of Tropical Depression Bonnie was located at latitude 32.8°N and longitude 80.1°W which put it about 5 miles (10 km) west of Charleston, South Carolina.  Bonnie was slowly meandering near the coast.  The maximum sustained wind speed was 30 m.p.h. (50 km/h) and there were wind gusts to 40 m.p.h. (65 km/h).  The minimum surface pressure was 1012 mb.

Strong southeasterly winds in the upper levels generated significant vertical wind shear that weakened Tropical Storm Bonnie to a tropical depression on Sunday morning.  However, the lower level circulation remained relatively intact as Bonnie moved onto the coast near Charleston, South Carolina.  Thunderstorms in a band west of the center of circulation dropped heavy rain in parts of southwestern South Carolina and eastern Georgia.  The heavy rain produced some flooding.

Most of the rain has tapered off to a few narrow bands of showers, which is normal at night when weaker tropical cyclones move inland.  However, daytime heating could destabilize the atmosphere and new thunderstorms could redevelop over land on Monday.  Some of those storms could also produce locally heavy rainfall and cause additional flooding.

The center of Tropical Depression Bonnie has drifted back to near the Atlantic Ocean.  Strong southeasterly winds are still blowing in the upper levels and the vertical wind shear should prevent significant redevelopment even if the center moves back over water.  Proximity to the ocean will make it easier for the circulation to pull in more moisture, which could contribute to heavier rainfall.

A high pressure system over the Atlantic and an approaching cold front will combine to produce southwesterly winds in the lower levels of the atmosphere.  Those low level winds are forecast to steer Tropical Depression Bonnie slowly toward the northeast during the next several days.  On its anticipated track Tropical Depression Bonnie is expected to move slowly along the coast of South Carolina and North Carolina.  The primary risks will be locally heavy rain, flooding and rip currents.