logo
Erin: Coastal flooding at high tides forecast in Carolinas, Virginia

Erin: Coastal flooding at high tides forecast in Carolinas, Virginia

Yahooa day ago
(The Center Square) – High tide peak storm surges from Hurricane Erin are forecast from 1 to 3 feet between South Carolina and Virginia, and 2 to 4 feet on the Outer Banks of North Carolina.
Erin at 8 a.m. Wednesday was Category 2 at 100 mph maximum sustained winds and moving 13 mph to the north-northwest, having started to make the turn away from the mainland as expected. The National Hurricane Center, an arm of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said the storm's center was 645 miles south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, and 900 miles west-southwest of Bermuda.
Veteran meteorologists have marveled at the size of the storm.
Hurricane force winds (74 mph or greater) extend outward 90 miles from the center, and tropical storm force winds (39 mph or greater) extend 265 miles from the center. Rain for the Carolina coast is just 1 to 2 inches Wednesday and into Thursday, with damage coming more from storm surge than rain or wind.
The next high tides on the Outer Banks are 6:18 p.m. Wednesday, and Thursday at 6:45 a.m. and 7:10 p.m. Erin has already sent Atlantic Ocean water over dunes and N.C. 12, the famed 148-mile roadway linking peninsulas and islands of the Outer Banks.
Mandatory evacuations have been issued for Ocracoke Island in Hyde County and Hatteras Island in Dare County. Each county has declared an emergency.
Storm surge warnings were in effect from Cape Lookout to Duck; a tropical storm warning was in effect from Beaufort Inlet to the Virginia border inclusive of the Pamlico and Albemarle sounds; and a tropical storm watch was in effect from the North Carolina-Virginia border to Chincoteague, Va.
The Wednesday evening high tide for coastal South Carolina, including Charleston, and southern North Carolina is being closely watched for flooding. Early Thursday evening is the expected time of coastal flooding from the southern Delmarva Peninsula and southern Chesapeake Bay down to eastern North Carolina.
The storm's projected path through the weekend skirts parallel to moving more away from the Atlantic Seaboard. Thursday's pass is by the Carolinas and Virginia, and Friday the storm will be moving by Maine.
Coastal rescues from rip currents in North Carolina, according to published reports, have numbered between 75 and 100 over Monday and Tuesday.
As often happens with hurricanes, water began to run over N.C. 12 on Tuesday. The highway begins at U.S. 70 at the community of Sea Level and runs to a point just north of Corolla and south of the Currituck Banks North Carolina National Estuarine Research Reserve. Two ferries, Hatteras Island to Ocracoke Island and Cedar Island to Ocracoke Island, are part of the route.
The storm's landfall miss of the state is particularly welcome in light of Hurricane Helene. Recovery from that storm is in its 47th week. Helene killed 107 in the state, 236 across seven states in the South, and caused an estimated $60 billion in damage to North Carolina.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What Happens When Hurricane Erin Crosses the Atlantic? Europe Is Watching.
What Happens When Hurricane Erin Crosses the Atlantic? Europe Is Watching.

New York Times

time6 minutes ago

  • New York Times

What Happens When Hurricane Erin Crosses the Atlantic? Europe Is Watching.

Britain is bracing for the arrival of Hurricane Erin next week, though forecasters are still uncertain if the storm, or what remains of it by then, will strike directly. It is nonetheless expected to have a lasting effect on the nation's weather for the remainder of the summer. Erin erupted into a hurricane last weekend, intensifying rapidly from a tropical storm to a Category 5 storm in just 24 hours. It has since weakened but its size is generating life-threatening surf and rip currents along much of the East Coast of the United States and the Bahamas. The National Hurricane Center predicts Erin will become post-tropical by late this week near the coasts of New England and Atlantic Canada. Erin's path after that is uncertain. Forecasts suggest that the system will continue toward western Europe, but where exactly it will land is not fully known yet. However, forecasters say one thing is clear: Erin will not regain hurricane strength as it crosses the cooler waters of the North Atlantic. 'Technically no hurricane could hit the U.K.,' said Aidan McGivern, a meteorologist with the Met Office, Britain's weather service. 'The seas surrounding the U.K. are simply not warm enough.' Tropical cyclones like Erin form over warm seas, with surface temperatures above 26 degrees Celsius (nearly 79 degrees Fahrenheit), where rising heat and moisture drive thunderstorms around a central eye. Low wind shear — winds that remain relatively consistent with height — helps those storms organize and intensify, but as conditions change, they weaken. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

A radical temperature shift takes shape for the end of August
A radical temperature shift takes shape for the end of August

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A radical temperature shift takes shape for the end of August

Both Ontario and Quebec are on track for a significant temperature drop as a taste of early fall arrives by the end of August. Hurricane Erin's track across the Atlantic is making waves beyond the ocean, influencing the jet stream over Eastern Canada with a deep trough settling over the region early next week. As Erin merges with a secondary low moving from Greenland towards Europe, atmospheric patterns are expected to lock the trough over the Great Lakes. DON'T MISS: High pressure over the Atlantic will reinforce this setup, leading to unseasonably cool weather for Ontario and Quebec. A cold front will sweep through on Sunday, bringing the potential for thunderstorms before the colder, drier air settles over the region. Temperatures will drop significantly, with Monday highs in Toronto expected to reach the low 20s -- about 5°C below seasonal norms. Early June was the last time most major cities have seen daytime highs at just 20°C. SEE ALSO: In Timmins, temperatures could plunge to 14°C, with single-digit overnight lows for many communities across northern Ontario. The cooler weather over the warm waters of the Great Lakes will also increase the potential for waterspouts and some lake-effect showers. Expect reduced temperatures to persist into early September before trending back towards seasonal into the Labour Day long weekend. WATCH: Surfers await Hurricane Erin's mighty waves in Nova Scotia Click here to view the video Be sure to check back for the latest weather updates across Ontario and Quebec.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store