Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Florence bulks up, aims for Carolinas

Other hurricane, storm no threat yet to South Florida

- By Brett Clarkson, Rafael Olmeda and Aric Chokey

This weekend’s weather made it clear that we’ve reached peaked hurricane season — two are churning in the Atlantic while a third is expected today.

Hurricane Florence is on course for landfall later this week in the Carolinas. The expected major hurricane could bring high surf and dangerous rip currents to the eastern U.S., including Florida’s east coast, until the end of the week.

The highest surfs will rise on Palm Beach County waters, the hurricane center said.

Hurricane Helene, upgraded from a tropical storm Sunday afternoon, had winds clocked at 75 mph. The weather service estimates that the storm will take a sharp north turn into the middle of the Atlantic later in the week.

Tropical Storm Isaac maximum sustained winds of 70 mph were just below the hurricane threshold of 74 mph. The forecast has Isaac plunging westward into the Caribbean by Wednesday night or Thursday, well south of Florida and Cuba.

To have this many storms simultaneo­usly in the Atlantic is not at all unusual for this time of year, meteorolog­ists say. September is the peak month for tropical weather — and Sept. 10 is the statistica­l peak day, said Dennis Feltgen, a meteorolog­ist and spokesman for the National Hurricane Center.

“We’ve seen this many times in the past,” said Dennis Feltgen, a

meteorolog­ist and spokesman for the National Hurricane Center. He noted that last year, Irma, Jose and Katia all were active at the same time.

The hurricane center predicted between nine and 13 named storms this season, four to seven of which would be hurricanes. The 2018 season has seen nine named storms so far and ends Nov. 30.

Florence’s strongest winds were measuring 85 mph, with a possible landfall as a major hurricane happening Thursday. The National Hurricane Center’s 5

p.m. advisory showed the storm was over 720 miles southeast of Bermuda and was likely to intensify to a major Category 4 hurricane as it travels west across the warm Atlantic waters.

“On the forecast track, the center of Florence will move over the southweste­rn Atlantic Ocean between Bermuda and the Bahamas Tuesday and Wednesday, and approach the southeaste­rn U.S. coast on Thursday,” the hurricane center said in its advisory.

Anticipati­ng Florence could directly hit the U.S. Southeast late this week, forecaster­s urged residents from South Carolina to the mid-Atlantic to get ready — and not just for a direct blow against the coast. They warned that Florence could slow or stall after coming ashore, with some forecastin­g models showing it could unload a foot or two of rain in places, causing devastatin­g inland flooding.

"Pretend, assume, presume that a major hurricane is going to hit right smack dab in the middle of South Carolina and is going to go way inshore," South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said. The state's emergency management agency said it is "preparing for the possibilit­y of a large-scale disaster."

The governors of North and South Carolina and Virginia declared states of emergency far ahead of the storm to get ready.

There also is a large area of disorganiz­ed showers and thundersto­rms southwest of Bermuda. It has only a 10 percent chance of forming into a tropical storm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States