“Hurricane Earl will not have too much of an impact on your area,” said meteorologist Tim Armstrong. “It might generate clouds Thursday and I don’t think you’ll see any wind over 15 to 20 mph — that’s the worst I could see there. It’s too far inland to see many effects from it.”
There would have to be a major shift in the storm’s direction to have any real impact on Robeson County, he said.
On its current track, the hurricane will stir up some trouble for northeast North Carolina.
“The Outer Banks, from Morehead City to Cape Hatteras, are going to see tropical storm conditions, with possible hurricane-force winds. That will be late Thursday to the first part of Friday,” said Armstrong.
Hurricane Earl, now a powerful Category 4 storm, continued its path toward the U.S. coast early today after battering tiny islands across the northeastern Caribbean with heavy rain and winds that damaged homes and toppled power lines.
Earl is forecast to brush the East Coast late Thursday, before curving back out to sea, potentially swiping New England or far-eastern Canada. The U.S. National Hurricane Center warned coastal residents from North Carolina to Maine to watch the storm closely.
Rough surf and rip currents could put a damper on Labor Day vacationers’ plans for a summer swan song trip to the ocean this weekend.
For the Carolinas, the rip current risk is expected to be high Wednesday and Thursday, with an elevated rip current risk continuing into the holiday weekend, according to the weather service.
“The surf will be dangerously high and rough. South facing beaches may experience minor erosion during high tide,” the forecast said.
People from northern Florida to the Outer Banks of North Carolina will notice swells and rip currents building during the day today, according to AccuWeather.com.
While the overall weather and surf will dramatically improve along the Atlantic coast during Labor Day weekend in Earl’s wake, there will still be dangerous rip currents Saturday from North Carolina northward as seas subside, said meteorologists at AccuWeather.com.
In the Caribbean, Earl caused flooding in low-lying areas and damaged homes on islands including Antigua and Barbuda, Anguilla and St. Maarten. Several countries and territories reported power outages. Cruise ships were diverted and flights canceled across the region.
The storm’s center passed just north of the British Virgin Islands on Monday afternoon. By nighttime, the hurricane was pulling away from the Caribbean, but heavy downpours still threatened to cause flash floods and mudslides in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands by drenching already saturated ground.
The Hurricane Center said it was too early to say what effect Earl would have in the U.S., but warned it could at least kick up dangerous rip currents. A surfer died in Florida and a Maryland swimmer had been missing since Saturday in waves spawned by former Hurricane Danielle, which weakened to a tropical storm Monday far out in the north Atlantic.
Craig Fugate, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said Earl’s approach ought to serve as a reminder for Atlantic coastal states to update their evacuation plans.
“It wouldn’t take much to have the storm come ashore somewhere on the coast,” Fugate said. “The message is for everyone to pay attention.”
Close on Earl’s heels, Tropical Storm Fiona formed Monday afternoon in the open Atlantic. The storm, with maximum winds of 40 mph, was projected to pass just north of the Leeward Islands by Wednesday and stay farther out in the Atlantic than Earl’s northward path. Fiona wasn’t expected to reach hurricane strength over the next several days.
The rapid development of Earl, which only became a hurricane Sunday, took some islanders and tourists by surprise.
Wind was already rattling the walls of Lila Elly Ali’s wooden house on Anegada, the northernmost of the British Virgin Islands, when she and her son went out to nail the doors shut Monday.
“They say the eye of the storm is supposed to come close to us, so we’ve just got to pray. Everyone here is keeping in touch, listening to the radio,” the 58-year-old said by phone from the island of 280 people.
After Earl’s center passed, there were reports of roofs torn from homes on Anegada, but the extent of damage across the Virgin Islands was unclear Monday night. Emergency officials said they had no immediate reports of any fatalities or serious injuries.
“Thank God we survived,” said a caller to the British Virgin Islands’ ZBVI Radio.
In Anguilla, several utility poles were down and a couple of roofs had blown away, but it was still too dangerous to go out and assess the full extent of damage, said Martin Gussie, a police officer.
At El Conquistador Resort in Fajardo, Puerto Rico, people lined up at the reception desk, the lights occasionally flickering, to check out and head to the airport. There, more delays awaited.
John and Linda Helton of Boulder, Colo., opted to ride out the storm. The couple, celebrating their 41st wedding anniversary, finished a cruise Sunday and planned to spend three days in Puerto Rico.
“There was a huge line of people checking out as we were coming in, and I thought it was just that summer vacation must be over,” said John Helton, a real estate appraiser. “But we paid for the room, so we might as well stick it out.”
“I don’t think we could get a flight even if we wanted to leave,” Linda Helton added.
There were no reports so far of major damage from Earl.
In St. Maarten, sand and debris littered the streets, and winds knocked down trees and electricity poles and damaged roofs. But police spokesman Ricardo Henson said there was no extensive damage to property.
In Antigua, at least one home was destroyed but there were no reports of serious injuries. Governor General Dame Louise Agnetha Lake-Tack declared Monday a public holiday to keep islanders off the road and give them a chance to clean up.
Some 4 to 8 inches of rain were forecast to fall on islands including Puerto Rico.
Early Tuesday, Earl was about 175 miles north-northwest of Puerto Rico’s capital, San Juan, and moving west-northwest near 13 mph according to the center in Miami. Hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 70 miles from its center.







