Hurricane Erin to create dangerous surf along US coast

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Erin has intensified into a major, dangerous hurricane, shipping up dangerous surf.
Erin has intensified into a major, dangerous hurricane, shipping up dangerous surf.

A stronger and bigger Hurricane Erin has pelted parts of the Caribbean and is forecast to create dangerous surf and rip currents along the US East Coast this week.

It reintensified to a Category 4 storm with 215km/h maximum sustained winds late on Sunday as its outer bands lashed the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, according to the US National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Erin was forecast to bring tropical storm conditions to the Turks and Caicos Islands and the southeast Bahamas overnight into Monday.

Additional strengthening was forecast for Monday followed by gradual weakening, but Erin was expected to remain a large, major hurricane into midweek.

Water surrounds a house in Guayama, Puerto Rico
Erin’s outer bands pelted parts of Puerto Rico with heavy rains and tropical-storm winds. (AP PHOTO)

Hurricane-force winds extended up to 95km from the centre and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 370km. The area of strong winds is expected to grow more over the next few days. At that size, Erin will impact coastal areas even though it isn’t forecast to make a direct landfall.

Dare County, North Carolina, declared an emergency and ordered an evacuation beginning Monday of Hatteras Island on the Outer Banks, the thin stretch of low-lying barrier islands that juts far into the Atlantic. Several days of heavy surf and high winds and waves could wash out parts of North Carolina Highway 12 running along the barrier islands, the National Weather Service said.

As of late Sunday, Erin was about 205km east-northeast of Grand Turk Island and about 1555km south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. It was moving northwest at 19km/h.

Erin, the year’s first Atlantic hurricane, reached an exceedingly dangerous Category 5 status Saturday with 260km/h winds before weakening. It is expected to remain powerful for the next several days and grow in size.

“You’re dealing with a major hurricane. The intensity is fluctuating. It’s a dangerous hurricane in any event,” said Richard Pasch of the National Hurricane Center.

Erin’s outer bands pelted parts of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands with heavy rains and tropical-storm winds on Sunday.

That knocked out power to about 147,000 customers and more than 20 flights were cancelled.

The Coast Guard allowed all ports in Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands to reopen on Sunday as winds and rains decreased.

Rough ocean conditions were forecast for parts of the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola and the Turks and Caicos the next couple of days. Life-threatening surf and rip currents were forecast into midweek for the Bahamas, Bermuda, the US East Coast and Canada’s Atlantic coast as Erin turns north and then northeast.

AP