Tropical cyclone Nadine (14L) remains active in the Atlantic Ocean…located approximately 715 miles south-southwest of the Azores. (Tropical storm…sustained winds of 60 mph)

PDC Global Hazards Atlas displaying 3 hour precipitation accumulation with NHC forecast positions, segments, winds and error cones for tropical storm Nadine in the Atlantic Ocean
Tropical storm Nadine (14L) remains active in the middle Atlantic Ocean, after having completed a complete loop, and then some…on its current forecast track. The NHC shows Nadine increasing another notch in strength during the next 12 hours, and remaining at that level (65 mph sustained winds) through the next two days. A westerly path is evident now, although a turn to the west-northwest and northwest will take this long lasting storm over cooler sea surface temperatures…which will begin to weaken Nadine by 72 hours. There are expected to be no land areas in Nadine’s way through the next week.
Speaking of long lasting, Nadine has now been active for 15 days, putting her in 9th place in terms of longest-lived storms since 1950. The all time record is held by the San Ciriaco Hurricane of 1899, which had 28 named storm days. (Information thanks to Dr. Jeff Masters of Weather Underground, and Dr. Phil Klotzbach of CSU.)