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The Category 4 storm is 400 miles wide and is getting stronger. The latest models show that Hurricane Florence could cause 10 feet of rain over parts of North Carolina.
USA TODAY & # 39; HUI

The strange saga of Hurricane Florence, which has already crossed the Atlantic from an unprecedented trajectory, should persist with a strange stall and a hike along the southeast coast.

Greg Postel, Weather Channel meteorologist, said: "Instead of roaring on the coast and weakening rapidly, as most storms do, Hurricane Florence is likely to crash near the coast and parallel to the coast. southwest to Georgia. "I have never seen anything like it."

Marshall Moss, Meteorologist at AccuWeather, said the Florence course is unique. "It was located further north in the Atlantic than any other storm that ever hit the Carolinas, so what we are anticipating is unprecedented," said Moss.

In addition, most of the storms that arrive in the Carolinas tend to move north, and this storm seems to stall in the region, added Moss.

Meteorologist Ryan Maue of Weather.us said "the entire shoreline of the Virginia-Savannah border in Georgia should be on the alert."

According to the Weather Channel forecasts, the forecasts for the winds that lead Florence will collapse for a while, which slows down the advance speed of the storm.

Although its speed ahead is expected to slow down, strong winds of at least 100 mph from Florence will continue. It will be a dreadful and dangerous hurricane along the southeast coast from Thursday at the end of the day and last all day Friday, bringing shrieking winds and breaking waves to the coastal areas.

The coastal areas will be bombarded by torrential rains, high winds and a storm surge, not for a few hours, but perhaps a few days, said AccuWeather.

More: "Storm of a lifetime" will cause a dangerous storm surge, extreme winds and torrents of rain

More: Follow Hurricane Florence

More: "Take your pets with you" to protect them during and after Hurricane Florence

As it twists and turns, the abundant rain that Florence unleashes will lead to "catastrophic" and "deadly" floods in the Carolinas. Generalized reports of 20 to 30 inches of rain are likely and some places might see 40 inches.

As if that were not enough, "isolated tornadoes will become a threat Thursday along the coast of North Carolina," said the Wilmington National Weather Service.

However, beyond that, "the 72-hour forecast is certainly a challenge … and a nightmare," said Maue.

The winds that grow Florence may remain weak until Saturday, when a high pressure zone that rises over the Midwest could push Florence West into the Southeast the rest of the weekend, the Weather Channel announced.

The Wilmington Weather Service predicted "a dangerous weekend across the region and preparations should be underway right now."

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Hurricane Florence is heading to the east coast of the United States. This was a potentially catastrophic Category 4 storm, but it was expected to continue to draw warm water energy and intensify to Category 5, which means winds of 157 mph or more. (September 12)
AP

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