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Hurricane Ophelia lurks off Carolina coast
11:23 AM CDT on Sunday, September 11, 2005
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Hurricane Ophelia sat off the coast of the Carolinas
on Sunday and a meteorologist said it was a waiting game to see where,
and if, the storm comes ashore.
"This one is sitting still," said meteorologist Gil Wagi at the National
Weather Service bureau in Newport, N.C.
The hurricane's top sustained wind decreased from 85 mph earlier in the
day to 80 mph at 11 a.m. A hurricane watch remained in effect from just
north of Edisto Beach, S.C., to North Carolina's Cape Lookout, a stretch
of more than 250 miles.
Although there was a chance Ophelia could remain at sea, most computer
models bring the hurricane close to the Carolinas late Tuesday or early
Wednesday, said Daniel Brown, a meteorologist with the National
Hurricane Center in Miami.
"They'll be feeling the effects there in portions of the Carolinas even
if it stays offshore," he said.
Conditions don't appear too favorable for Ophelia to strengthen much, he
said.
North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley declared a state of emergency as the
storm's meandering track shifted northward. The storm was not close
enough to make a decision on whether to order evacuations, said Eddie
King, Pender County emergency management director.
South Carolina officials said a decision would be made soon about
whether to order evacuations, but Charleston County said it would open
shelters for voluntary evacuees from low-lying areas and barrier islands.
The storm is "moving really slow so we have to hang with it. But there
is some expectation it will move toward the coast," said Joe Farmer, a
spokesman for the South Carolina Emergency Management Division.
At 11 a.m. EDT, Ophelia was 265 miles east-southeast of Charleston,
S.C., and about 250 miles south of Cape Hatteras, N.C. The storm was
stationary after following a meandering course since becoming a tropical
storm Wednesday off the coast of Florida.
Ophelia already was contributing to rough surf along the coast.
"There are large swells from Ophelia and residual swells from (Tropical
Storm) Nate and from the northeast winds we've had over the past few
days. You can imagine how confused the seas are," said meteorologist
Steve Pfaff at the National Weather Service in Wilmington, N.C. He said
a buoy at Frying Pan Shoals, 35 miles off Cape Fear, reported 12-foot
waves Saturday.
Nate and another tropical storm, Maria, were heading toward the cooler
water of the north Atlantic.
Ophelia is the seventh hurricane in this year's busy Atlantic hurricane
season, which began June 1 and ends Nov. 30. Peak storm activity
typically occurs from the end of August through mid-September.
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