Nicole
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Hurricane watch: Subtropical storm eyes Florida, Bahamas
FRIEDA FRISARO and JULIE WALKER
Mon, November 7, 2022 at 7:29 AM
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Subtropical Storm Nicole is now expected to become a hurricane over the Bahamas before hitting Florida’s east coast on Wednesday, just well enough after polls close to avoid disrupting voting on Election Day, forecasters said.
"We won’t really start to see any significant impacts from Nicole until really Tuesday night to Wednesday, so really it shouldn’t have a huge impact on voting operations tomorrow,” hurricane specialist Phillippe Papin told The Associated Press.
“Unfortunately this is going to be a very large storm, with a very large wind field on the north side. This is going to cause quite substantial surf, potentially dangerous storm surge somewhere along the Florida east coast, and heavy rainfall and probably significant winds over a large area,” Papin added.
Hurricane watches are in effect for the northwestern Bahamas and Florida's Atlantic Coast from Hallandale Beach, north of Miami, to just north of Daytona Beach, as well as inland to Lake Okeechobee, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory.
A Storm Surge Watch has been issued from Broward County to halfway up Georgia's coast.
The hurricane center predicted a particularly wobbly forward movement for Nicole as it approaches Florida before crossing into the northwest Gulf of Mexico. At 1 p.m. Monday, it had top winds of 45 mph (75 kmh) and was centered about 465 miles (750 kilometers) east of the northwestern Bahamas, the advisory said.
“Do not focus on the exact track of Nicole since it is expected to be a large storm with hazards extending well to the north of the center, and outside of the cone, and affect much of the Florida peninsula and portions of the southeast U.S.,” the advisory said.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for 34 counties in the potential path of the storm, out of an abundance of caution.
“While this storm does not, at this time, appear that it will become much stronger, I urge all Floridians to be prepared and to listen to announcements from local emergency management officials,” DeSantis said in a statement.
“While this storm does not, at this time, appear that it will become much stronger, I urge all Floridians to be prepared and to listen to announcements from local emergency management officials,”
Large parts of the state have yet to recover from destructive Hurricane Ian, which slammed into southwestern Florida on Sept. 28 as a strong Category 4 hurricane and dumped massive amounts of rain, causing flooding across central Florida.
Along Florida’s central Atlantic coast, nervous county managers warned residents that the tropical storm could bring more flooding and beach erosion only weeks after Ian inundated the region with unprecedented levels of water.
In Volusia County, home to Daytona Beach, county officials advised coastal residents to consider moving to a safer location as soon as possible.
Volusia County Emergency Director Jim Judge said the area could get 4 inches to 8 inches (10.2 cm to 20.3 cm) of rain and winds strong enough to cause flooding and widespread power outages, along with more permanent damage.
“We need to take this storm very seriously because it could cause more coastal erosion, which could be devastating to our beachfront properties impacted by Hurricane Ian,” Judge said in a statement.
Volusia County is one of the few Florida counties where driving is permitted on beaches. Vehicles were being prohibited on the sand starting Tuesday until the storm passes. County officials said repairs to sea walls damaged by Ian would no longer be able to made after Monday because the tides will be too high. Building inspectors also were keeping their eyes on the structural integrity of about two dozen oceanfront homes already damaged by Ian and threatened by the new storm.
“The potential for impacts is very significant in terms of erosion,” said Jessica Fentress, coastal division director for Volusia County. “They are calling for a swell event, on top of high tide on top of a wind situation.”
In Seminole County, northeast of Orlando, officials opened sandbag distribution locations on Monday.
Just as waters had receded from hundreds of residents’ homes, Seminole County faced the prospect of getting 7 inches (17.8 cm) of rain in some areas from Danielle, said Alan Harris, Seminole County’s emergency manager.
Officials also worried about the dangers from winds blowing large piles of debris still on the roads and in yards left over from Ian.
“No one wants to hear that but that is what it looks like as of today,” Harris said at a news conference Monday. “We are trying to prepare our community for the worst and hoping for the best.”
A subtropical storm is a non-frontal low-pressure system that has characteristics of both tropical and extratropical cyclones. They tend to have a larger wind field, extending much farther from their centers. Forecasters said the storm could possibly transition into a tropical system as it continues to develop.
The Atlantic hurricane season began on June 1 and ends on Nov. 30.
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Comments
That's not what Fla. needs, 2 hits in a row! Hope all of our members in the path stay safe.
I am OVER hurricanes, two in less than two months. It's not that I'm afraid of them, it's that damn cleanup after the fact, at 75 and with a bad back I am having a difficult time keeping up.
My heart goes out to those unfortunate people that lost everything because of flooding because they are about to get a replay. We have been blessed as we incurred no damage either by wind or water so far. just a ton (literally) of debris on every square inch of the property
Well, I hope that this is the last one for this year, Hurricane season ends officially November 31st.
looking forward to some rain when it comes thru SC
Hopefully they will just get a tropical storm
I was in Gulfport MS. just after hurricane Camille came through.That gave me plenty of respect for hurricanes.
It’s really windy and pouring rain but we still have power for now.
I drove through Gulfport A YEAR after Camille hit. That gave me plenty of respect for hurricanes. I saw cars lodged in oak trees, 15 feet off the ground.
Stay safe
Raking leaves will be quick this winter. Between the 2 storms I have about 20% remaining.
Great ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Ricci is looking for a new conspiracy theory. This might have potential.
Just went thru a tornado warning... it missed by about 2 mile.
It started raining yesterday (Thursday) afternoon. Didn't rain all that much but was steady. 3:15 AM (Friday) we were having about a 45 minute downfall that was the proverbiel goose drownder!!
Toad strangler here, sort of passing on by at the moment.
Just 1.3 inches so far, but about 20 miles from here it had already hit 5 inches at noon.
Storm hit CT yesterday afternoon, it's going to stay till tomorrow afternoon.
Over 1" rain in first 1-1/2 hours
Right now sounds like a cow peeing on a flat rock !