Quantcast North Texas Daily
College Media Network
  • Tropical Storm Cristobal brushes NC coast

    ESTES THOMPSON Associated Press Writer

    Issue date: 7/21/08 Section: NATIONAL
    • Print
    • Email
    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Tropical Storm Cristobal dumped rain and brought rough seas to the North Carolina coast Sunday, and forecasters predicted the system was headed for the open Atlantic.

    Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Dolly drenched Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and was expected to reach the Gulf of Mexico Monday.

    At 8 p.m. EDT, the National Hurricane Center said Cristobal's center had moved to 25 miles south-southeast of Cape Hatteras with maximum sustained winds increasing to near 50 mph. The storm was moving to the northeast at 9 mph.

    The advisory said the storm's center would head away from the coast early Monday, and predicted little change in strength over the next day or two.

    The National Hurricane Center issued a tropical storm warning from Cape Lookout to the Virginia-North Carolina border, including Pamlico Sound.

    Cristobal's strongest winds were east of the center, out at sea, National Weather Service meteorologist Rich Bandy said. Winds on the coastal side of the storm were about 25 mph and will have little impact on coastal cities unless the storm strengthens.

    "There is a little more rain than earlier in the day," Bandy said. "It's not like the whole area is being inundated."

    Bandy said some rain was falling over the smoldering wildfire that has burned 64 square miles in Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge since it was started by lightning June 1.

    "We're still seeing fairly continuous bands of showers and isolated thunderstorms moving through eastern North Carolina," said Mark Willis, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service bureau in Newport. "There are going to be some areas that don't receive anything and other areas will get several inches."

    The prospect of seeing Cristobal head out to sea pleased a fishing captain at Ocracoke, an island south of Cape Hatteras.

    "Let's get it over with so we can go fishing," said Capt. David Nagel, who has operated the "Drum Stick" charter boat for 31 years. "Nobody's out. Everybody's tied up."
    Page 1 of 2 next >

    Article Tools

    Be the first to comment on this story

    • NOTE: Email address will not be published

    Type your comment below (html not allowed)

      I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

    North Texas students review their credit score before submitting home / car loan applications on or around campus. North Texas students can contact a Houston Criminal Defense Attorney if ever witnessing unlawful student acts on or around campus.

    REGISTER
    CONTACT
    NEWSSTANDS
    RSS FEED

    BLOGS
    PHOTO BLOG NEWS BLOG SPORTS BLOG ARTS BLOG TECH BLOG







    Advertisement

    Featured Video


    Avery Williamson sits down for a quick discussion about his music project, Fizzy Dino Pop and his future plans. Credit to Arash Sahba

    News at a glance

    What do you like the most about Denton?

    Submit Vote

    View Results

    Advertisement