spinning down here to the south west, this will contain the remnants of what was tropical storm danielle. most of the rain from that will be moving in across spain and portugal pretty soggy spell of weather to come but what this storm system will do is it will feed some warmth northwards into the southern half of the uk, so some quite high temperatures on monday across parts of southern england into wales, to the south of this band of cloud and rain. that will be sitting across central parts and that will separate the warm air in the south, 26 degrees, from some much cooler airfurther north a much fresher feel for scotland, northern ireland and the far north west of england. looks like that band of rain will sink its way southwards into tuesday, so some rain across southern counties. behind that, again, the wind direction shifts, but back to northerlies this time, so it will feel that bit cooler. 17 23 degrees, but there should still be some good spells of sunshine. that s becaus
of weather to come. but what the storm system will do is it will feed some warmth northwards into the southern half of the uk, so some quite high temperatures on monday across parts of southern england into wales, to the south of this band of cloud and rain, that will be sitting across central parts and that will separate the warm air in the south, 26, from much cooler air further north, a much fresher feel for scotland, northern ireland and the far north west of england. it looks like that band of rain will sink its way southwards into tuesday, so some rain across southern counties, behind that the wind direction shifts back to northerlies this time, so it will feel cooler. 17 23 degrees, but there should still be some good swells spells of sunshine. that is because high pressure is likely to be building in by this stage, still low pressure spinning to the south of us that may throw a frontal system into southern counties of england, maybe parts of south wales as we go through the
kids back to school and we can get on with our lives. i don t think anyone is going to complain after what they saw happen in the bahamas, there s no fooling around. evacuations and getting out of the way, people will be happy to return home to a house and they don t have to do a lot of repairs. bill karins joining me, hats off to the hard-working folks at the national hurricane center. this storm, we don t know where it s going. the path has not changed from the hurricane center ever since four or five days ago. they had to go along the coast, they had it stalling. so the path forecast was implemented. hear, hear. bill, thank you for that. for the latest on the storm s impact on the areas bill was talking about, let s go to wilmington, north carolina and cal perry. how is it now? we checked in with you last hour. reporter: in theory when you talk about the backside of a storm and how that wind
winds recorded well over hurricane force for a number of hours. here is where the storm is right now about 30 miles away from victoria, texas. that s a significant town there they are going to be getting the worst of the winds just about right now. but it s moving so slowly, it s going to go on for a very long time. usually whether you have a hurricane make landfall, have you the storm surge and then the wind direction shifts and the storm surge all goes away very quickly. that is not going to happen in this case. you continue to see an on shore flow piling water into this area. it doesn t allow it to go away. and because the storm is going to stay in the general vicinity for the next four to five days, it s going to keep a lot of that water for at least probably the next day and a half, two days. 10 to 12-foot storm surge piling that water in there and then all of the rain that is going to continue to dump over the next couple of days. i will tell you some of the models now indicating
until midmorning or even later based upon what the conditions might be. so let s find out where hurricane arthur is at this very moment. meteorologist bill karins is tracking this storm. good morning. what are you seeing? good morning. and happy fourth of july. the storm itself made a six-hour journey over the outer banks of north carolina. it s now exiting into the open atlantic. whatever damage has been done, probably about 80% of that damage has already occurred. we re still probably get something sound side flooding as the storm exits the wind direction shifts and the water from the sound is coming back towards the outer banks and that will do some damage. new update still has it as a very strong storm. looks impressive thane satellite imagery. the back side is cutting off quickly. the sun will be out this morning in areas like wilmington who last night were dealing with this storm. midmorning until noon, the sun will start coming out in north