CHARLESTON — The Lowcountry was spared from the most significant wind and rain that forecasters expected Tropical Storm Chantal to dampen the holiday weekend with, but the potential for rip currents on July 6 could still have deadly impacts.
Chantal made landfall at Litchfield Beach in Georgetown County around 4 a.m. July 6, National Weather Service meteorologist Neil Dixon told The Post and Courier.
The tropical storm’s power strengthened as it neared the Palmetto State, bringing 60 mile-per-hour winds that downed some trees and heavy bands of rainfall to that part of the state, Dixon said.
Rip currents pose the largest remaining risk from the storm. Hundreds were reported on July 5, including one fatality.
Paul Peters, a 38-year-old North Carolina man, drowned on Hunting Island after reportedly trying to save his child from a current.
“We just want to ask — especially for our out-of-town visitors — to be very cautious at the beach,” Dixon said.
Swimmers shouldn’t wade deeper than their waist during the potentially “chaotic surf conditions” expected on July 6, Dixon added.
Light rain is expected in the Charleston area July 6, but temperatures should be “quite pleasant” in the mid-to-upper 80s as Chantal leaves behind some cloud cover, Dixon said.
As the storm continues moving out of the area, hot and humid air and higher temperatures will return July 7.
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