AP:
Hurricane forecasters expect Rita to stall just after landfall, drenching the Texas-Louisiana border from the coast to Texarkana with 8 inches to 2 feet of rain.It's the second biggest fear after the damage the storm causes when it strikes early Saturday.
Hurricanes are guided by winds at upper levels of the atmosphere, known as steering currents. There often is a brisk steering current blowing west-to-east that moves a storm quickly. But in this storm, "the steering currents are very, very weak," said National Weather Service meteorologist Jason Hansford in Shreveport, La. "It's going to pretty much stall out."
The forecasters don't know how long Rita might sit on the Texas-Louisiana border, but they do have a rainfall prediction.
"On the current track ... we're looking at widespread rainfall amounts of 8 to 15 inches with some locations getting 20 to 25 inches," Hansford said.
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