Hurricane Helene: 'Unsurvivable' storm surge warning as ...

yesterday

People in parts of Florida could face an "unsurvivable" storm surge when Hurricane Helene makes landfall on Thursday.

Hurricane Helene - Figure 1
Photo Sky News

High winds, possibly in excess of 130mph (209kph), and flash floods are possible across southeastern parts of the country, the US National Weather Service in Tallahassee said.

Helene is expected to be a major hurricane - a Category 3 or higher - when it hits Florida's northwestern coast on Thursday evening.

Image: People load a truck with furniture in Cedar Key, Florida. Pic: Reuters

Image: Visitors hit by wind-driven waves in Key West, Florida. Pic: Rob O'Neal/The Key West Citizen/AP

At lunchtime (UK time) the US National Hurricane Center placed Helene around 365 miles (585km) south of Apalachicola, on the Big Bend coastline, where Florida's panhandle and peninsula meet.

Hurricane Helene - Figure 2
Photo Sky News

It was crossing the Gulf of Mexico as a Category 2 hurricane travelling at sustained wind speeds of up to 100mph (155kph), and is expected to grow stronger before it hits land, the weather service said.

States of emergency have been declared in Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas, with hurricane and flash flood warnings in place as far away as south-central Georgia.

Several Florida counties are under mandatory evacuation orders, and millions of people are under flood watch.

Storm surges, the wall of seawater pushed on land by hurricane-force winds, could be as high as 20 feet (6m), the weather service said and could be "catastrophic and unsurvivable" in Florida's Apalachee Bay, south of Tallahassee.

There is also a risk of high winds and heavy rains, it said, calling the forecast "a nightmare surge scenario" for the bay and urging residents to "please, please, please take any evacuation orders seriously!"

Hurricane Helene - Figure 3
Photo Sky News

Image: A restaurant is boarded up in Cedar Key, Florida. Pic: Reuters

Tallahassee residents have been leaving their homes, many having stocked up on sandbags, food and supplies, Sky's US partner NBC News reported.

The city's mayor John Dailey urged people to take the warnings "extremely seriously", calling Helene "the biggest storm in the history of the city to hit us head-on".

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Hurricane Helene - Figure 4
Photo Sky News

Speaking to NBC News on Wednesday, Mr Dailey said that though they are "very prepared", he was also "very nervous, and I hope everyone is nervous".

He added: "This is a big storm. It is going to cause a lot of damage."

Jared Miller, sheriff of Wakulla County, where Helene is forecast to make landfall, went further - calling the oncoming storm "not a survivable event for those in coastal or low-lying areas".

The county has issued a mandatory evacuation order, but one resident, Christine Nazworth from Crawfordville, which is located about 25 miles (40km) from Apalachee Bay, said her family would be sheltering in place.

She said: "I'm prayed up. Lord have mercy on us. And everybody else that might be in its path."

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Hurricane Helene - Figure 5
Photo Sky News

Image: Damage caused by Tropical Storm Helene in Puerto Juarez, Cancun, Mexico. Pic: Reuters/Paola Chiomante

Image: Helene caused streets to flood in Guanimar, Cuba. Pic: AP/Ramon Espinosa

Leslie Powell, from Quincy, a city a similar distance from Tallahassee, told NBC she was leaving her mobile home to go to a shelter with her 8-month-old baby and six-year-old daughter.

She said simply: "I'm scared. I've got a lot of trees around my home, so it's not safe for me and my kids."

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