![]() ![]() Hurricane Larry continues to bring tropical storm force wind and heavy rain to Bermuda. Larry will then merge with another system near Greenland. Larry will gradually weaken over the next day or so before bringing hurricane conditions to southeast Newfoundland. Larry hasn't changed much over the past few hours with maximum sustained wind of 90 mph and minimum central pressure of 966 mb. Hurricane Larry is moving away from Bermuda as conditions start to improve for the island. Larry could produce swells along the U.S. Larry will drop several inches of rain and bring dangerous storm surge to Newfoundland tonight before moving further north and becoming extratropical. Larry is still strong for a high latitude storm although some dry air has impacted the system. It is still a big storm with hurricane force wind extending to 90 miles from its center and tropical storm force wind up to 240 miles from its center. Hurricane Larry now has wind of 80 mph as it races to the NNE at 29 mph. Once it moves into open water of the Labrador Sea it is expected to weaken substantially due to much colder water temperature and higher wind shear. ![]() Larry will make landfall overnight in southeast Newfoundland as conditions will start to deteriorate later this evening. It has accelerated since the last advisory and is moving quickly to the NNE at 35 mph. Hurricane force wind now extend 105 miles from its center with tropical storm force wind 255 miles away from its center. Hurricane Larry continues to be a large storm in surface area with maximum sustained wind of 80 mph. Blizzard conditions & heavy snowfall of 2-5 feet possible. After making landfall tonight, it is forecast to become extratropical but still have big impacts on Greenland. Hurricane Larry is racing toward SE Newfoundland with winds of 80mph. The combination will produce blizzard conditions. Then it will heads toward Greenland & combine with another low pressure area. East Coast.Larry is now close enough to Newfoundland that impacts are being seen. In the case of a hurricane, these strong winds blowing over larger areas of the ocean generate waves that propagate away from the storm, known as swells.įor a hurricane in the central Atlantic Ocean like Larry, these swells are reaching the north- and east-facing coasts of the Leeward Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, the Bahamas and most of the U.S. Winds blowing over the ocean produce waves. So why is there concern over a hurricane hundreds of miles away that isn’t forecast to track anywhere near the East Coast? Larry Is a Wave Generator ![]() We won’t have to worry about threats from storm surge, flooding rain, damaging winds or tornadoes along the East Coast as we saw last week with Hurricane Ida. ( MAP: Interactive Hurricane Larry Forecast Path)īefore it curls away from Bermuda, Larry’s center will track no closer than 700 miles from the East Coast. It will pass just east of Bermuda Thursday, then curl northeastward toward eastern Newfoundland, Canada, late this week. ![]() Larry intensified into a large Category 3 hurricane over Labor Day weekend and is currently over the open waters of the central Atlantic Ocean. East Coast, but like other distant storms, it poses one indirect danger that has proven deadly in the past: rip currents. Hurricane Larry won't track anywhere near the U.S. ![]()
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