Forecasters and emergency agencies prepped for a long weekend early Friday as Tropical Storm Erika wobbled toward Puerto Rico and then the southern Atlantic coast, where it could be a hurricane when it arrives early next week.
A tropical storm warning was in effect for Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands after Erika caused mudslides blamed for at least four deaths on the Caribbean island of Dominica.
Tropical Storm #Erika is impacting Puerto Rico and should approach the Bahamas this weekend: http://t.co/2Mpd0UkZKK pic.twitter.com/9Nix7FATCD
— Hurricane Central (@twc_hurricane) August 28, 2015
More than 12 inches of rain poured down on Dominica in less than 12 hours, the National Weather Service said — and it could do close to the same overnight and Friday on Puerto Rico, where forecasters warned that major flooding is possible.
After that, it’s anybody’s guess.
The center of Erika started “wobbling” Thursday, according to the weather service, making it difficult to project its course. The storm was about 135 miles south east of San Juan, Puerto Rico, at 11 p.m. Thursday night with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph, the National Hurricane Center said.
Could this swirl be the center of Erika or one of many swirls in large center? pic.twitter.com/L50dDFIQHD
— Bill Karins (@BillKarins) August 28, 2015
“At this point, to quote Shakespeare, ‘to be or not to be — that is the question,’” said Danielle Banks, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel. “There’s still a lot of uncertainty with the track and the intensity.”
Late Thursday afternoon, forecasters said Erika looked increasingly likely to reach the U.S. mainland Monday night or Tuesday morning, possibly as a Category 1 hurricane.
“We’re still a long ways away from this thing affecting” the mainland, said Ari Sarsalari, another Weather Channel meteorologist. But Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, he said, “might have to start thinking about making preparations.”
It already was — like emergency management agencies from the southern tip to the Panhandle of Florida on the Gulf side of the state and up to North Carolina on the Atlantic side.
“It’s going to be all hands on deck this weekend,” Carl Barnes, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service’s regional office in North Charleston, South Carolina, told NBC station WCBD of Charleston.
Kim Stenson, director of the South Carolina Emergency Management Division, said: “We’re watching Tropical Storm Erika very closely. If it looks like this storm is going to affect South Carolina, we want everyone to be ready.”








