Hurricane Kyle Roars Toward New England
First Hurricane Watch In 17 Years Posted For Parts Of Maine Coast
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This image provided by NOAA shows Tropical Storm Kyle taken at 12:15 p.m. EDT Sept. 27, 2008. (AP Photo/NOAA)
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Authorities expect the state to see the worst late Sunday or early Monday, with wind gusts as high as 60 mph and waves of 15 to 20 feet, said Robert McAleer, Maine Emergency Management Agency director.
Authorities have advised Mainers living on coastal islands to evacuate if they depend on electricity for medical reasons, because ferry service will probably shut down Sunday, McAleer said. Significant power failures on the north coastal region of the state were also expected, he said.
"There's going to be some beach erosion. Our southern coastline is susceptible to beach erosion; the northern coastline is more rocky," he said.
He warned that coastal flooding could be a problem and said some hospitals in vulnerable areas had started sandbagging. Another major threat is small stream flooding, he said.
"We urge everyone to pay close attention to weather warnings and stay away from any flooded roadways or fast-running streams," he said.
It was Maine's first hurricane watch in 17 years, the National Weather Service said. Elsewhere in New England, a hurricane warning was posted for Nantucket Island off the coast of Massachusetts in September 1996, according to the Weather Service office in Taunton, Mass.
Two to 4 inches of rain had already fallen along some coastal areas by midday Saturday, and the storm was expected to deliver an additional 2 to 4 inches, said Eric Schwibs of the Weather Service in Gray.
At 8 p.m. EDT, Kyle was centered well off North Carolina, about 405 miles south of Nantucket, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
The storm had top sustained winds near 75 mph and became a Category 1 hurricane Saturday afternoon. It was moving north over the open Atlantic at 24 mph. It was expected to strengthen slightly before weaking closer to Maine.
Kyle's center was forecast to be near eastern New England or the Canadian Maritime provinces late Sunday, the Hurricane Center said.
All told, weather watches or warnings stretched along the entirety of the Maine coast.
The Hurricane Center posted a hurricane watch from Stonington, at roughly the center of the Maine coast, to Eastport, on the border with the Canadian province of New Brunswick. A tropical storm warning extended from Port Clyde, about 50 miles northeast of Portland, to Eastport. A tropical storm watch extended from Port Clyde to Cape Elizabeth, an area that includes Portland, Maine's largest city.
A hurricane watch means hurricane conditions, with winds of at least 74 mph, are possible within 36 hours. A tropical storm warning means conditions for that type of storm, with winds of 39 to 73 mph, are expected within the next 24 hours. A tropical storm watch means those conditions are possible within 36 hours.
The Weather Service also issued flood watches for the southern two-thirds of New Hampshire and southern Maine through Sunday evening.
Kyle could make landfall near Eastport, possibly late Sunday, the Hurricane Center said.
That would put the storm's strongest wind in New Brunswick, rather than in Maine, which would get conditions more akin to "a garden variety nor'easter," Schwibs said.
The Coast Guard urged sailors to seek safe haven, saying the storm may hinder their ability to respond to emergencies.
The state Emergency Management Agency has deployed communication equipment to the area where the storm is most likely to make landfall, McAleer said. An emergency operations center is expected to be activated Sunday morning.
The government of Canada issued a hurricane watch and a tropical storm warning for southwestern Nova Scotia, and a tropical storm watch remained in effect for the rest of Nova Scotia and southwestern New Brunswick.
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- Im'' glad and surprised the writer of this article didn''t mention Hurricane Katrina or Ike...I''m tired of hearing about those.
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- I nave senoior parents living in Maine. I HOPE he goes out tam a MAINER IN IN Ao sea. i blame them car and the road that never cool down. Yer right humans are to blame. I am a Mainer in seattle.
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- Well, up goes the price of lobster and any other seafood harvested in that area of the country. Probably send more bad weather eastward too. Mother Nature is letting us know enough IS enough. Funny how a species can smell its own extinction, huh?
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