Monday 13 October 2014

Hurricane in the Carribean

Another cyclone evades my attention. How odd, the NZ Herald hasn't bothered much with other typhoons in its own region

Hurricane rips through Caribbean

Hurricane Fay lashed Bermuda with winds up to 120kph. Photo / Thinkstock
Hurricane Fay lashed Bermuda with winds up to 120kph. Photo / Thinkstock

13 October, 2014


Hurricane Fay toppled utility poles and knocked out power to thousands of people in Bermuda before moving out over open ocean, just as a new storm races toward the eastern rim of the Caribbean threatening to become a hurricane.

Fay strengthened into a hurricane Sunday afternoon (local time) but was expected to return shortly to tropical storm strength, according to the US National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Gonzalo was centered roughly 205 kilometers east of the Guadeloupe Sunday afternoon and was expected to pick up strength as it moved toward Puerto Rico, according to the center.

Tracking west at about 19 kph, forecasters said accelerating Gonzalo could reach hurricane strength by the time it hit Puerto Rico's southern coastline Tuesday morning.

After tracking across the US Caribbean territory of about 3.6 million people, forecasters expect Gonzalo to curve over the open Atlantic and stay away from the US East Coast.


Tropical storm warnings and watches were issued for a number of Caribbean locales, including the French dependency of Guadeloupe, the Dutch Caribbean territory of St Maarten, as well as Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands.

As the wind began to pick up under partly blue skies on Sunday, Caribbean residents wary of a possible blow from the approaching tropical storm stocked up on fuel and groceries and pulled boats ashore or moored them at marinas.

"We're being told that it's coming this way so people are trying to find safe havens for their boats. Hopefully, all we'll get is some rain but you have to be prepared as best as you can," said Jane Wherren, operations director at Crown Bay Marina, which caters to mega yachts and other pleasure watercraft up to 60 meters in length.

From Puerto Rico, the US Coast Guard warned people to avoid the ocean and stay away from shoreline rocks starting noon Monday.

"Tropical Storm Gonzalo is developing quickly," said Guard Captain Robert Warren.

Rain-swollen Gonzalo was expected to move through parts of the Leeward Islands by early Monday, producing 10-20 centimeters of rain, with some areas potentially getting 30 centimeters.

The storm forecasts prompted at least one cruise ship company to tweak its itineraries.

Carnival Cruise Lines' Breeze ship cancelled a visit in La Romana, Dominican Republic, and its Liberty vessel is moving to western Caribbean ports to avoid the storm, according to spokesman Vance Gulliksen.

Hundreds of miles north of the Caribbean, Fay tracked away from Bermuda and headed over the open Atlantic after lashing the British chain with heavy rain and gusting winds.

There were no immediate reports of injuries as Bermuda authorities assessed damage Sunday and discontinued storm watches and warnings.

Fay, which had maximum sustained winds near 120 kph and stronger gusts, disrupted power for more than 27,000 customers of the Bermuda Electric Light Company.

The utility is the sole supplier of electricity for the territory of roughly 65,000 inhabitants.

Fay downed trees and utility poles and several roads were blocked across the tiny archipelago, which has one of the highest per capita incomes in the world and enforces strict building codes to ensure that homes can withstand intense weather.

Bermuda authorities urged residents not to venture out on the roads.

"The safest thing is for people to remain at home and allow the important work that follows this kind of storm to be done safely," Acting Premier Trevor Moniz said.

By late Sunday morning, Hurricane Fay was centered about 465 kilometers northeast of Bermuda and moving east-northeast at almost 41 kph.

The US National Hurricane Center in Miami said some fluctuations in intensity were likely during the day, but it was expected to weaken late Sunday.

The storm system's bands were expected to dump as much as 13 centimeters of rain during its passage over Bermuda but winds and rains were forecast to diminish over the course of the day. The storm-hardened territory's weather service warned that Fay was causing hazardous surf on south-facing shores.


It was expected to become a post-tropical cyclone later Sunday and forecasters said a cold front was likely to absorb Fay on Monday

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