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Wilma Helps Stoke Powerful Nor'easter By KEN MAGUIRE, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 47 minutes ago
GLOUCESTER, Mass. - A nor'easter that drew energy from the remnants of far-off Hurricane Wilma battered New England and the mid-Atlantic states with 20-foot waves and winds up to 70 mph Tuesday, brought some inland areas their first snow of the season and knocked out power to nearly 200,000 homes and businesses.
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The powerful nor'easter reminded fishermen of the deadly "Perfect Storm" of October 1991.
"It's pretty nasty," said John Yard, who had rented an apartment a block from the ocean in Manasquan, N.J., three weeks ago — just in time for flooding caused by eight straight days of rain earlier this month. "It's been hell with all the flooding and the water out here. It's amazing what this weather is doing."
On Cape Cod, Harwich Harbormaster Thomas Leach recorded sustained wind of 56 mph and gust of 70 mph.
The storm was reinforced by the remnants of Hurricane Wilma, which was about 400 miles southeast of Boston and speeding toward the North Atlantic after battering Florida a day earlier.
"It's getting some energy from Wilma, but it's its own separate system," said Alan Dunham, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Taunton. The nor'easter is "a good storm in its own right."
Many commercial fishermen stayed in port, mindful of the "Perfect Storm," which inspired the book and movie of the same name about a Gloucester fishing boat that disappeared when a nor'easter collided with Hurricane Grace in the North Atlantic.
"I wouldn't want to be out there today — too dangerous," fisherman Matt Farrara said as he made repairs to his boat at Gloucester. He fished through the 1991 storm.
In New Jersey, waves up to 20 feet high washed away stretches of beach at Bay Head, and howling wind stripped sand off the shore at Point Pleasant Beach, piling it 3 feet deep on a street a block inland.
Dozens of flights were canceled at Boston's Logan Airport. In the New York City area, airports reported flight delays of as much as 3 1/2 hours.
With the ground already soggy from one of the rainiest Octobers on record, the high winds toppled trees, bringing down power lines. In Massachusetts alone, 40,000 homes and businesses lost electricity.
Snow fell at higher elevations from West Virginia, which got up to 7 inches, to northern Maine. The wet, heavy snow brought down tree limbs and power lines, blacking out some 76,000 customers in West Virginia and 27,000 in Pennsylvania.
One Pennsylvania traffic death was blamed on the weather.
Atop New Hampshire's Mount Washington, the Northeast's tallest peak at 6,288 feet, the Mount Washington Observatory measured 100 mph wind and near-blizzard conditions in fog and blowing snow.
"It's going pretty crazy out here," said Tim Markle, the observatory's chief meteorologist.
___
AP reporters Wayne Parry in Manasquan, N.J.; Vicki Smith in Morgantown, W.Va.; Matt Pitta on Cape Cod, Theo Emery in Concord and Brooke Donald in Boston contributed to this report.
___
On the Net:
Mount Washington Observatory: http://www.mountwashington.org
1 hour, 47 minutes ago
GLOUCESTER, Mass. - A nor'easter that drew energy from the remnants of far-off Hurricane Wilma battered New England and the mid-Atlantic states with 20-foot waves and winds up to 70 mph Tuesday, brought some inland areas their first snow of the season and knocked out power to nearly 200,000 homes and businesses.
ADVERTISEMENT
The powerful nor'easter reminded fishermen of the deadly "Perfect Storm" of October 1991.
"It's pretty nasty," said John Yard, who had rented an apartment a block from the ocean in Manasquan, N.J., three weeks ago — just in time for flooding caused by eight straight days of rain earlier this month. "It's been hell with all the flooding and the water out here. It's amazing what this weather is doing."
On Cape Cod, Harwich Harbormaster Thomas Leach recorded sustained wind of 56 mph and gust of 70 mph.
The storm was reinforced by the remnants of Hurricane Wilma, which was about 400 miles southeast of Boston and speeding toward the North Atlantic after battering Florida a day earlier.
"It's getting some energy from Wilma, but it's its own separate system," said Alan Dunham, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Taunton. The nor'easter is "a good storm in its own right."
Many commercial fishermen stayed in port, mindful of the "Perfect Storm," which inspired the book and movie of the same name about a Gloucester fishing boat that disappeared when a nor'easter collided with Hurricane Grace in the North Atlantic.
"I wouldn't want to be out there today — too dangerous," fisherman Matt Farrara said as he made repairs to his boat at Gloucester. He fished through the 1991 storm.
In New Jersey, waves up to 20 feet high washed away stretches of beach at Bay Head, and howling wind stripped sand off the shore at Point Pleasant Beach, piling it 3 feet deep on a street a block inland.
Dozens of flights were canceled at Boston's Logan Airport. In the New York City area, airports reported flight delays of as much as 3 1/2 hours.
With the ground already soggy from one of the rainiest Octobers on record, the high winds toppled trees, bringing down power lines. In Massachusetts alone, 40,000 homes and businesses lost electricity.
Snow fell at higher elevations from West Virginia, which got up to 7 inches, to northern Maine. The wet, heavy snow brought down tree limbs and power lines, blacking out some 76,000 customers in West Virginia and 27,000 in Pennsylvania.
One Pennsylvania traffic death was blamed on the weather.
Atop New Hampshire's Mount Washington, the Northeast's tallest peak at 6,288 feet, the Mount Washington Observatory measured 100 mph wind and near-blizzard conditions in fog and blowing snow.
"It's going pretty crazy out here," said Tim Markle, the observatory's chief meteorologist.
___
AP reporters Wayne Parry in Manasquan, N.J.; Vicki Smith in Morgantown, W.Va.; Matt Pitta on Cape Cod, Theo Emery in Concord and Brooke Donald in Boston contributed to this report.
___
On the Net:
Mount Washington Observatory: http://www.mountwashington.org