Hurricane
Warning
Day #5, Early Morning:
Storm Moves Closer
Early Wed. Morning, October 4, 1995
PENSACOLA BEACH- Hurricane Olivia raced toward the
northeast
A hurricane warning is now in effect,
including the
Olivia has challenged forecasters at every
turn. First the storm changed course to move away from the
To top it off, yesterday the storm's northeast pace quickened from 11 mph to 21 mph within hours. Location of Olivia is 24.3 north and 88.2 west.
The faster speed has pushed up the landfall time from midnight to this afternoon, forecasters said. That gives local residents less time to clear out, if they choose or are ordered to leave.
Olivia also grew from a moderate category-one hurricane to a dangerous category-three storm. That means its winds increased from 80 miles per hour yesterday morning to 120 mph this morning.
"By far this is the biggest storm this
year for
The categories are based on a hurricane rating system called the Saffir/Simpson scale. A category-one storm has winds of 74 to 95 mph and damages trees and weak structures.
A category-three storm, however, packs winds that can damage many buildings and causes extensive coastal flooding or "storm surge." This storm surge can destroy buildings along the coast.
Residents weary of the overactive 1995
Atlantic hurricane season embarked on what has become routine practice of
boarding up their homes, some still leaking from Hurricane Erin. Erin slammed
the
State officials, however, are worried that Olivia's rapid strengthening might catch some off guard.
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