hurricane erin, New York City beaches and NYC
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Forecasting a storm's intensity can be more challenging than predicting where it will make landfall. Forecast models, particularly for hurricanes, have improved, but they can still miss intensification or overstate it. Below is the intensity for Erin so far, and how experts at the Hurricane Center believe it will weaken or strengthen.
Hurricane Erin is on track to stay offshore but still bring dangerous rip currents to New York and New Jersey beaches.
Erin, a sprawling Category 2 hurricane, is not forecast to make landfall but will impact much of the East Coast with dangerous coastal conditions as it tracks north, nearly paralleling the coast. Bermuda will face similar conditions to the storm's east.
In this FOX 5 NY News Block, Hurricane Erin is expected to run parallel to the Eastern Seaboard, posing threats of life-threatening surf and dangerous rip currents to areas like New Jersey, New York and Long Island throughout the week.
Hurricane Erin is expected to remain offshore—but its effects could still reach parts of the New York coastline this week. See the tracker.
NYC's mixed weather includes slight showers, sunny days, with a hazardous weather outlook due to Hurricane Erin.
Hurricane Erin weakened to a category 3 hurricane during the early hours of Aug. 19 as it moves closer to the East Coast, according to the National Hurricane Center. As of 5 a.m. Aug. 19, Erin was located 675 miles southwest of Bermuda and 750 miles from Cape Hatteras,