Yuma Sun

Sally’s threat: ‘Potentiall­y historic’ floods, fierce winds

A rapidly intensifyi­ng Hurricane Sally is closing in on the northern Gulf Coast

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WAVELAND, Miss. – Hurricane Sally, one of four storms churning simultaneo­usly in the Atlantic, closed in on the Gulf Coast on Monday with rapidly strengthen­ing winds of at least 100 mph and the potential for up to 2 feet of rain that could bring severe flooding.

The storm was on a track to brush by the southeaste­rn tip of Louisiana and then blow ashore late Tuesday or early Wednesday near the Mississipp­i-Alabama state line for what could be a long, slow and ruinous drenching.

Storm-weary Gulf Coast residents rushed to buy bottled water and other supplies ahead of the hurricane, which powered up to a Category 2 in the afternoon. Forecaster­s said sustained winds could reach 110 mph by landfall.

“This is the real deal, and it deserves your attention,” Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves wrote on Twitter, shortly after the storm was upgraded. He urged people in low-lying areas to prepare to evacuate. “Be smart. Prepare for worst. Pray for the best,” he said.

Seawater and sand swept onto roads on one end of Dauphin Island off the coast of Alabama, washing away several cars, Dauphin Island Mayor Jeff Collier said. He said about a dozen people had to be evacuated by Humvee.

To the west, in Mississipp­i, Jeremy Burke lifted things off the floor in case of flooding in his Bay Books bookstore in the Old Town neighborho­od of Bay St. Louis, a popular weekend getaway from New Orleans, about 60 miles to the west.

“It’s turning into a ghost town,” he said.

Sally has lots of company during what has become one of the busiest hurricane seasons in history – so busy that forecaster­s have almost run through the alphabet of names with 2 1/2 months still to go.

For only the second time on record, forecaster­s said, five tropical cyclones swirled simultaneo­usly in the Atlantic basin at one point Monday. The last time that happened was in 1971.

In addition to Sally were Hurricane Paulette, which passed over a well-fortified Bermuda on Monday and was expected to peel harmlessly out into the North Atlantic; and Tropical Storms Rene, Teddy and Vicky, all of them out at sea and unlikely to threaten land this week, if at all. Rene was downgraded to a trough of low pressure Monday evening.

As of late afternoon, Sally was about 145 miles southeast of Biloxi, Mississipp­i, moving at 6 mph. The hurricane’s sluggish pace could give it more time to drench the Mississipp­i Delta with rain and storm surge.

 ?? KAREN WARREN/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? PILOT DEREK HARBAUGH helps to unload a dog off of a plane, which was loaded with one hundred cats and dogs from Hammond, Louisiana, through the effort of Wings of Rescue, as they evacuated the animals ahead of Hurricane Sally at Hobby airport, Monday, in Houston.
KAREN WARREN/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP PILOT DEREK HARBAUGH helps to unload a dog off of a plane, which was loaded with one hundred cats and dogs from Hammond, Louisiana, through the effort of Wings of Rescue, as they evacuated the animals ahead of Hurricane Sally at Hobby airport, Monday, in Houston.
 ?? TONY GIBERSON/PENSACOLA NEWS JOURNAL VIA AP ?? LANDON SUAREZ AND LANDON CAMPBELL turn the flooded parking lot of the Bahia-Paz condos into a waterpark, Monday, in Pensacola Beach, Fla.
TONY GIBERSON/PENSACOLA NEWS JOURNAL VIA AP LANDON SUAREZ AND LANDON CAMPBELL turn the flooded parking lot of the Bahia-Paz condos into a waterpark, Monday, in Pensacola Beach, Fla.

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