Watches, Warnings & Advisories



2 products issued by NWS for: Satellite Beach FL

Hazardous Weather Outlook

Hazardous Weather Outlook
National Weather Service Melbourne FL
321 AM EST Tue Dec 3 2024

AMZ550-552-555-570-572-575-FLZ041-044>046-053-058-141-144-154-159-
164-247-254-259-264-347-447-547-647-747-040400-
Flagler Beach to Volusia-Brevard County Line 0-20 nm-Volusia-
Brevard County Line to Sebastian Inlet 0-20 nm-
Sebastian Inlet to Jupiter Inlet 0-20 nm-Flagler Beach to Volusia-
Brevard County Line 20-60 nm-Volusia-
Brevard County Line to Sebastian Inlet 20-60 nm-
Sebastian Inlet to Jupiter Inlet 20-60 nm-Inland Volusia-
Northern Lake-Orange-Seminole-Osceola-Okeechobee-Coastal Volusia-
Southern Lake-Coastal Indian River-Coastal Saint Lucie-
Coastal Martin-Inland Northern Brevard-Inland Indian River-
Inland Saint Lucie-Inland Martin-Mainland Northern Brevard-
Northern Brevard Barrier Islands-Inland Southern Brevard-
Mainland Southern Brevard-Southern Brevard Barrier Islands-
321 AM EST Tue Dec 3 2024

This Hazardous Weather Outlook is for east central Florida.

.DAY ONE...Today and tonight.

.EXCESSIVE COLD IMPACT...
Several hours of wind chill values well into the 30s across the
interior, and upper 30s to low 40s across the coast this morning
as well as tonight into Wednesday morning. The longest duration
of these cold wind chills will be in Lake, Volusia, Osceola, and
Okeechobee counties, as well as adjacent portions of Orange and
Seminole counties. A Frost Advisory is in effect this morning for
northern Lake and interior Volusia counties where areas of frost
are forecast. Patchy to areas of frost will once again be possible
tonight and into Wednesday morning across Lake, interior Volusia,
and southern Osceola counties.

.RIP CURRENT AND SURF IMPACT...
A strong, southward-moving longshore current continues at all
area beaches today. There is a moderate risk of life-threatening
rip currents at all central Florida Atlantic beaches. Always swim
near a lifeguard and never enter the water alone.


.WIND AND SEA IMPACT...
North winds between 15 to 20 knots will build seas up to 5 to 8
feet. A small craft advisory is in effect until 4 AM on Wednesday
for all the offshore waters. Small craft should exercise caution
across all the nearshore waters today.

.DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN...Wednesday through Monday.
A few more cold nights are expected through at least Wednesday morning,
especially into Wednesday morning, as low temperatures drop into
mid 30s to low 40s, with wind chill values in the 30s, across much
of the area.

Poor seas across the offshore waters are expected to linger into
Wednesday as seas begin to subside.

Sensitive fire weather conditions are expected to continue
through late week.

.SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT...
Spotter activation will not be needed today and tonight.

$$

Watson




Beach Hazards Statement

Coastal Hazard Message
National Weather Service Melbourne FL
210 AM EST Tue Dec 3 2024

FLZ141-154-159-164-347-447-647-747-040900-
/O.EXT.KMLB.BH.S.0024.000000T0000Z-241204T0900Z/
Coastal Volusia-Coastal Indian River-Coastal Saint Lucie-
Coastal Martin-Mainland Northern Brevard-
Northern Brevard Barrier Islands-Mainland Southern Brevard-
Southern Brevard Barrier Islands-
210 AM EST Tue Dec 3 2024

...BEACH HAZARDS STATEMENT NOW IN EFFECT THROUGH LATE TONIGHT...

* WHAT...A strong, southward-flowing longshore current is forecast
  to develop at all central Florida Atlantic beaches today, along
  with a moderate risk for dangerous rip currents.

* WHERE...Coastal Volusia, Coastal Brevard, Coastal Indian River,
  Coastal Saint Lucie, and Coastal Martin counties.

* WHEN...Through late tonight.

* IMPACTS...The southward-flowing current could pull swimmers into
  deeper water, making them more susceptible to dangerous rip
  currents. This will also generate strong rip currents near
  piers, jetties, and reefs.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

Swim near a lifeguard. If caught in a rip current, relax and
float. Don`t swim against the current. If able, swim in a
direction following the shoreline. If unable to escape, face the
shore and call or wave for help.

&&

$$