Posted by: coastlinesproject | August 5, 2012

TS Ernesto approaches Jamaica, Florence off Cape Verde Islands, both could strengthen to hurricane force.

Jamaica braces for heavy rain as TS Ernesto nears

Updated 4:55 a.m., Sunday, August 5, 2012
  • This NOAA satellite image taken Saturday, August 4, 2012 at 01:45 PM EDT shows Tropical Storm Ernesto now about 295 miles south-southeast of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic with maximum sustained winds up to 50 mph.  This system shows some weakening as it continues on a westward path at 18 mph. Meanwhile in the north, an area of low pressure over the Bahamas produces more showers and thunderstorms that reach into Florida.  This system has a low, 10% chance of tropical cyclone development. Photo: Weather Underground / AP
    This NOAA satellite image taken Saturday, August 4, 2012 at 01:45 PM EDT shows Tropical Storm Ernesto now about 295 miles south-southeast of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic with maximum sustained winds up to 50 mph. This system shows some weakening as it continues on a westward path at 18 mph. Meanwhile in the north, an area of low pressure over the Bahamas produces more showers and thunderstorms that reach into Florida. This system has a low, 10% chance of tropical cyclone development. Photo: Weather Underground / AP

 

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Tropical Storm Ernesto churned westward Sunday toward waters south of Jamaica, threatening to dump several inches of heavy rain on the island during its passage through the central Caribbean.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said at 5 a.m. EDT Sunday that Ernesto was centered about 240 miles (385 km) southeast of Kingston, Jamaica. Ernesto had maximum sustained winds of about 50 mph (85 kph) and was moving westward at 22 mph (35 kph).

The storm wasn’t expected to strengthen much during the day. But it was forecast to gradually begin gaining power Monday in the warm Caribbean waters and possibly reach hurricane strength by Monday evening.

Ernesto was following a course predicted to take it south of the Cayman Islands on Monday and over the beach resorts of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula by Wednesday.

With forecasters predicting possible rains of up to three to six inches in Jamaica, islanders stood in long lines at grocery stores Saturday in the island’s capital of Kingston to buy bottled water, bread and canned goods.

“We’re going to have heavy rains, so I’m stocking up,” said Marco Brown, a Kingston resident in his late 50s.

The Jamaican government ordered fishermen on outlying cays to evacuate and move to the main island.

The hurricane center said Jamaica should brace for tropical storm conditions beginning Sunday afternoon. Occasionally heavy showers and thunderstorms also were possible over the Dominican Republic and Haiti, it said.

Elsewhere, Tropical Storm Florence, which formed recently far out in the Atlantic, had stopped strengthening early Sunday, forecasters said.

Florence had top sustained winds of 60 mph (95 kph) and is 680 miles (1,090 km) west of the Cape Verde Islands. But the forecasters said the storm was expected to begin strengthening anew in the next day or so.

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