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Hurricane Season 2005-2006 Last Updated: Oct 24th, 2006 - 17:24:11


Florence strengthens into a hurricane
By Associated Press
Sep 10, 2006, 08:02

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HAMILTON, Bermuda - Florence intensified into a hurricane Sunday as it headed for Bermuda, where residents installed storm shutters and hauled their yachts onto beaches.

This satellite image collected at 11:31 pm EDT Saturday Sept. 9, 2006 provided by NOAA shows Tropical Storm Florence, right, north of Puerto Rico. Florence, which could become a hurricane as it moves over the open Atlantic on Sunday, was expected to reach the tiny British territory of Bermuda Monday, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. At 11 p.m. EDT, the storm was centered about 395 miles south of Bermuda, where it had started to rain. Florence was moving northwest at about 13 mph. The storm's maximum sustained winds were near 65 mph. Tropical storm force wind extended up to 260 miles from the storm's center. (AP Photo/NOAA)


Florence was expected to reach the tiny British territory Monday, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. But was too early to tell whether it will make a direct hit.

The storm was a Category 1 hurricane — the second of the 2005 Atlantic season — with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph, the hurricane center said.

Bermuda issued a hurricane warning, and the government urged its 65,000 residents to take precautions. Part its volunteer army has been mobilized. The hurricane center said tropical storm force winds could hit the North Atlantic Island by Sunday afternoon.

"We are asking residents to please stay home. We are urging the public's cooperation so that emergency vehicles will have free passage on the roads," Derrick Burgess, minister of public safety, said at a news conference. "Also, we are discouraging the public from sightseeing as this puts everyone at risk."

He also encouraged the public to stock up on hurricane supplies and secure their homes, lawn furniture and any other loose items which could be affected by high winds.

In boatyards and marinas in Bermuda — a wealthy island chain 640 miles east of the U.S. coast — boat owners dragged their yachts onto beaches or secured their moorings.

At Pitts Bay marina, Bermudian Alan Hughes moved his 17-foot Boston Whaler away from the dock wall and tied it down.

"We are obviously concerned and cautious. It will be a tidal issue, with up to five or six foot tidal swells," he said.

At the Fairmont Hamilton Princess, the hotel distributed a disaster plan — which included provisions for evacuation — and told guests that patio furniture would be removed from their rooms.

Roy Riggio, a 72-year-old volunteer counselor with Medicare from New Canaan, Conn., said he and his wife, Barbara, arrived in Bermuda on Friday.

As other guests at the Fairmont were leaving, Riggio said he didn't believe the hurricane would deter him and his wife and he wanted a "window seat" at the hotel's restaurant on Sunday night to watch the storm.

"If not, I'm going to take pictures from my room — I have a room up at the top of the hotel — and I want to get some photos. I'm not a glutton for punishment, but it's exciting," he said.

Authorities said they were closing the island's only airport, Bermuda International Airport. Flights from New York and Miami scheduled to arrive late Saturday have been canceled.

Ferries stopped running Saturday afternoon and bus service was to end Sunday at 1 p.m.. Authorities have opened a shelter in the island's center, and the public utility has warned there may be power outages due to the high winds.

Public schools and government offices will be closed Monday.

Acting Police Commissioner Roseanda Young said arrangements have been made for tourists to leave after the airport shuts down, with commercial airlines and private jets helping out.

"All tourists have been given the opportunity to leave. Those still here have chosen to stay," she said.

The storm was expected to veer away from the U.S. coast as it turns north toward Bermuda, but forecasters said its large size could also create high surf and rip currents along parts of the eastern U.S. coast.

"Those waves will affect a good portion of the U.S. East Coast from basically Florida all the way up to the Cape Cod area" starting Sunday through the early part of next week, said Stacy Stewart, a senior hurricane specialist at the hurricane center. "When those large swells come rolling in to the coastline they tend to produce dangerous and potentially deadly rip currents."

Large ocean swells were affecting Bermuda and the northern coasts of the Caribbean islands, including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, the hurricane center said.

Hurricane force winds extended 45 miles from the storm's center, and tropical storm force winds reached out 260 miles. At 5 a.m. EDT, the storm was centered about 320 miles south of Bermuda, moving northwest at 15 mph.

Bermuda requires newly built houses to withstand sustained winds of 110 mph . It also has a sturdy infrastructure with many of its power and phone lines underground.

Hurricane Fabian killed four people when it struck in 2003 as the strongest storm to hit Bermuda in 50 years. Fabian, a Category 3 hurricane with 120 mph winds, tore the roofs off several homes and left many of Bermuda's famed golf courses in ruins.

Florence follows on the heels of Tropical Storm Ernesto, which was briefly the season's first hurricane before weakening and drenching the U.S. East Coast last week. The storm was blamed for nine deaths in the United States and two in Haiti.

___

On the Net:

U.S. National Hurricane Center: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov





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