A deluge roared over the East Coast on Saturday, closing roads,
causing blackouts and evacuations, and threatening all-time rainfall records in
South Carolina and the southern Appalachians.
The potentially
historic precipitation will last all 48 hours of the weekend, due to a 1-2 punch
from Hurricane Joaquin over the open Atlantic and a second weather system.
Parts of the
South Carolina coast braced for likely flooding with more than 15 inches.
In Virginia
Beach, Virginia, Bubba's Seafood restaurant fought a surge of coastal waters --
and then saw dolphins at its door, CNN affiliate WVEC reported.
"I'm a good citizen and I'm going to obey," Shirley
Jones of Charleston, South Carolina, said Saturday of official advisories to
stay home and out of the knee-deep water.
"I'm going
to hole up in my apartment and clean out my dresser."
As of 7 a.m.
Saturday, Charleston already broke its daily record rainfall of 3.46 inches.
As South
Carolina residents hunkered down, up to 500 residents were evacuated in coastal
Brunswick County, North Carolina, that state's governor said.
Flood and flash
flood watches are posted from Georgia to Delaware through at least Sunday.
"The magnitude of rainfall coupled with already-wet soil
will bring about the threat of potential significant flooding impacting life
and property," CNN meteorologist Michael Guy said. "There is also and
increased threat of landslides and debris flows across the mountains and
foothills of the Carolinas.
"Life-threatening
rip currents, high surf, and coastal flooding, mainly at high tides, will
stretch nearly the entire eastern U.S. coast," he added, noting wind gusts
that could reach 30 mph and could topple trees.
A foot of rain
could befall the Southern Appalachians. The Northeast could see two inches. And
up to four inches could strike the waterfront between Georgia and New Jersey.
While it appears Hurricane Joaquin won't make a direct hit on
U.S. mainland, communities from the Southeast to New England had their gutters
full from the second system that's largely stalled and, in so doing, pummeled
millions with rain.
Meanwhile,
Joaquin strengthened Saturday and returned to its prior monster status: a
Category 4 hurricane with 130 mph winds. It was between Bermuda and the
Bahamas' San Salvador Island as of mid-day Saturday.
"This is
not just any rain," Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina said. "This is
going to be the heaviest rain we have ever seen."
Added Gov. Pat
McCrory of North Carolina: "The tough news for North Carolina and
especially South Carolina is continued rain."
McCrory
expressed appreciation for how Joaquin didn't slam into the eastern seaboard as
earlier feared.
"It could
have been much worse if that hurricane shifted to the west," McCrory told
CNN.
Both Carolinas, New Jersey, and Virginia declared states of
emergency.
The National
Weather Service warned that some places could see as much as 12 inches of rain.
Flooding is a
major concern for a number of reasons: directly from all the rains, indirectly
from rivers and creeks possibly overflowing their banks, and also from storm
surges fanned by strong winds. Beaches off New Jersey and Delaware, for
instance, had seen around 50 mph gusts by Friday.
Compounding this is the fact that the region was already drenched.
"We've
gotten into this pattern of lows in the Mid-Atlantic, which has had lots of
rain the last two weeks," CNN meteorologist Rachel Aissen said. "So
the ground is just saturated."
'Squeezing effect' for rains, winds
A few days ago, some forecasters thought
that Hurricane Joaquin could make landfall over the weekend in Virginia or
somewhere in that vicinity. The fear was that this could be another Superstorm
Sandy -- an October storm that barrels up from the Caribbean with high winds,
heavy rains and deadly flooding.
Such an extreme
seems unlikely now, though it doesn't mean history won't be made.
Aissen explained
that a combination of factors, including a high-pressure system behind the system,
are helping push Joaquin away from the U.S. coast. At the same time, they're
making the system now parked there more dangerous.
"It's creating a squeezing effect that is just ushering
both moisture and high winds," said the CNN meteorologist, explaining that
the winds are more a worry -- not due to the damage they can do themselves, but
how they might rustle up storm surges.
In an
anticipation of that wet reality, Friday night football games were moved up a
day over flooding concerns in South Carolina's Lowcountry region, while others
were postponed. The Yankees-Orioles game in Baltimore and the Marlins-Phillies
showdown in Philadelphia were both postponed due to rain.
Farther north, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie warned that --
hurricane or not -- there could be flooding in the southern counties of Cape
May, Atlantic, Cumberland and Salem.
Said New York
Gov. Andrew Cuomo: "We're not getting complacent, because weather reports
change. We're making sure that everything is ready to go, just in case."
Along Virginia
Beach's Atlantic Avenue, a main thoroughfare about two blocks from the ocean,
business owners appeared to be taking a wait-and-see approach on Friday.
"We're usually fine here," said Sharlotte Castillo at
the Sunsations beach shop. "Maybe a little rain, but we're staying
open."
Even as far
north as Waterbury, Vermont, Skip Flanders was keeping an eye out. He's seen
firsthand from 2011's Hurricane Irene that the heavy rains from a huge tropical
system like this can have devastating effects far from the coast.
"We had 28
inches of water in our house from Irene," Flanders told CNN
affiliate WCAX. "I certainly hope that something of that
proportion doesn't happen again."
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