
A storm without a name was expected to bring flooding to the East Coast from South Carolina to New Jersey and high winds to New York City over the holiday weekend.
The unnamed storm sent seawater again into Charleston, South Carolina, where three dozen roads were closed as floodwaters reached well above ankles before receding. Friday morning’s high tide reached 8.46 feet, which was the 13th highest in more than a century of recorded data in Charleston Harbor.
Tidal flooding also closed roads for a few hours along the Georgia and Florida coasts.
The persistent, strong winds from the unnamed nor’easter and unusually high king tides, when the moon is closer than usual to the Earth, had forecasters predicting more problems this weekend along the North Carolina Outer Banks, where a series of storms that moved well offshore have destroyed 10 houses in the past month and breached dunes. The pilings of some homes in Buxton were already in the waves before the worst of the storm.
Officials warned that Highway N.C. 12 on Hatteras and Ocracoke islands would likely have to close again because of ocean overwash.
The worst conditions will spread north this weekend and into the Columbus Day holiday on Monday as the storm moves up from Florida. Forecasters warned people on the shores of Delaware and New Jersey to prepare for major coastal flooding.
A high wind watch was issued for parts of New York City and Long Island, where forecasters warned gusts of up to 60 mph were possible Sunday.
Out in the Atlantic, Tropical Storm Jerry was pulling away Friday from the northern Leeward Islands, but heavy rain continued.
Jerry was centered about 750 miles south of Bermuda and moving north-northwest at 15 mph with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph.
Way up in the northern Atlantic, Subtropical Storm Karen formed far from land, then lost its subtropical characteristics less than 24 hours later, the hurricane center said.
A subtropical storm tends to have a wider zone of strong winds farther from its center compared to a tropical storm, which generates heavier rains, according to the U.S. National Weather Service.
In the Pacific, tropical storm warnings associated with Tropical Storm Raymond were in effect from Manzanillo to Cabo Corrientes, Mexico; for Las Islas Marias; and for Baja California Sur from Los Barriles to Santa Fe, Mexico.
A couple of vehicles had already been swept away by floodwaters in New Mexico late Friday afternoon. In northern Arizona, washes that are normally dry were filled with fast-flowing water.
Raymond was forecast to remain off the southwestern coast of Mexico through Friday before nearing Baja California Sur on Saturday and Sunday.
Raymond was about 145 miles west of Manzanillo. It had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and was moving northwest at 17 mph, forecasters said.
By Jeffrey Collins

