Tropical Storm Fay May Strengthen Into Hurricane Over Atlantic
TS Fey may gain strength once it crosses over Florida and goes into the Atlantic Ocean according to the National Hurricane Center which has issued a watch along the east coast of Florida and Georgia.
The storm's center is expected to move offshore after midnight New York time in the vicinity of Vero Beach, Florida, about 129 miles (208 kilometers) north of Miami, said Dan Kottlowski, expert senior meteorologist at private forecaster AccuWeather Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania.
``There is a good chance it will become a hurricane,'' Kottlowski said by telephone. ``There is very warm water in the Gulf Stream current off the coast; if it can get over that, some computer information says it could strengthen to at least a Category 1 hurricane.''
Fay was moving north-northeast at 8 mph and was located about 60 miles south-southwest of Melbourne, Florida, the hurricane center in Miami said in an advisory on its Web site at about 5 p.m. local time.
Kottlowski said models show the storm heading over the ocean then hooking back toward the west and making landfall in Georgia on Aug. 21 or 22.Some models show the storm eventually re-emerging in the Gulf of Mexico, said Brian Wimer, a meteorologist for AccuWeather.
If Fay enters the Gulf, it may then make landfall between New Orleans and the Florida panhandle on Aug. 23, Jeff Masters, director of meteorology at private forecaster Weather Underground Inc., said on his blog.
Fay was forecast to bring as much as 15 inches (38 centimeters) of rain to parts of Florida. Storm tides of 1 to 3 feet (0.9 meters) above normal are possible, as are isolated tornadoes, the hurricane center said.
A tropical-storm warning was in effect along parts of Florida's east coast as well as Lake Okeechobee.
Monroe, Collier, Lee, Hendry and Charlotte counties said on their Web sites that schools are closed today.
Caribbean Deaths
The storm killed more than a dozen people in the Caribbean, including some in Haiti, the Associated Press reported.
Fay killed five people in the Dominican Republic, the country's Emergency Operations Center said on its Web site.
A man was seriously injured by flying debris in Marathon Key, Florida, while preparing for the storm, according to the Monroe County Web site.
Orange juice prices fell, after yesterday touching the highest this month as the storm approached. Florida is the world's second-largest orange grower.
Source