Medicine Hat News

Post-tropical storm Teddy makes landfall in Nova Scotia bringing high winds, rain

-

The centre of post-tropical storm Teddy made landfall in eastern Nova Scotia on Wednesday morning and then trudged across southern Cape Breton, its 100-kilometre-per-hour winds causing power outages - but not much damage.

Bob Robichaud, a meteorolog­ist at the Canadian Hurricane Centre in Halifax, said the sprawling, ragged storm came ashore near Sheet Harbour around 10 a.m., about 115 kilometres east of Halifax, and then took its time passing overhead.

On Hart Island, which is north of Canso at the eastern edge of the mainland, a peak gust of 107 km/h was recorded at 10 a.m. local time. In the lower half of Cape Breton, the small community of Eskasoni recorded a gust of 104 km/h.

By noon on Wednesday, about 18,000 Nova Scotia Power customers were in the dark, with the pattern of outages shifting from western Nova Scotia to Cape Breton, where almost 12,000 customers were without electricit­y.

Schools were closed, public transit in Halifax was suspended until noon and many flights were cancelled, but Teddy didn’t leave much of a mark on the province.

“There was no hurricane Teddy,” Tina Boutilier said as she and Glenn Robb watched the waves crash against the seawall in Cow Bay, east of Halifax. “This is just a windy day in Nova Scotia.”

Robb chose to look on the bright side. “I’m just glad there’s no damage,” he said. “The waves are beautiful. They’re huge. They’re breaking out there kilometres away.”

Despite Teddy’s unruly bluster, the sheltered harbours along the eastern shore appeared to weather the storm. In East Chezzetcoo­k harbour, about 40 kilometres east of Halifax, fishing vessels bobbed safely in choppy waves as Teddy moved over the area.

Further east in Guysboroug­h, municipal councillor Sheila Pelly said the storm wasn’t nearly as bad as post-tropical storm Dorian, which caused widespread damage and knocked out power for 500,000 people across the Maritimes in September 2019.

 ?? CP PHOTO ANDREW VAUGHAN ?? Waves batter the shore in Cow Bay, N.S., on Wednesday. Hurricane Teddy has impacted the Atlantic region as a post-tropical storm, bringing rain, wind and high waves.
CP PHOTO ANDREW VAUGHAN Waves batter the shore in Cow Bay, N.S., on Wednesday. Hurricane Teddy has impacted the Atlantic region as a post-tropical storm, bringing rain, wind and high waves.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada