Rain and have wind started in the town of Morehead City, North Carolina, ahead of Hurricane Florence on Sept. 13.
The NHC said that Florence has 105 mph winds.
“It truly is really about the whole size of this storm,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham told The Associated Press. “The larger and the slower the storm is, the greater the threat and the impact—and we have that.”
It added: “This large-scale feature is expected to keep the hurricane moving northwestward today, followed by a turn toward the west at a much slower speed on Friday as the ridge to the north of Florence weakens due to a weak shortwave trough dropping slowly southward from the Ohio Valley.”
Florence Figures
According to The Associated Press:—Size: Hurricane-force winds extend up to 80 miles from the center, and tropical storm-force winds extend up to 195 miles. Overall, Florence is about 400 miles wide.
—Rainfall: parts of the Carolinas could see 20 inches to 30 inches, with isolated areas getting 40 inches, over seven days along the coast.
—Storm surge: up to 13 feet, and seawaters could push inland 2 miles, depending on how long Florence lingers.