Nation and World
Sunday July 20, 2008
Tropical storm menaces Carolina coast

1 of 2 Photos
The Associated Press
This NOAA satellite image taken Saturday shows clouds off the Southeast Coast associated with Tropical Storm Cristobal.
RALEIGH, N.C. - Tropical Storm Cristobal skirted the North Carolina coast today, dumping heavy rain and churning up rough surf, but so far sparing the seaboard of any severe weather.

The storm was forecast to head away from the Southeast coast Monday, a prospect that pleased a fishing captain standing on a dock 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."

Nagel said he saw ominous clouds looming to the south and that the seas outside his harbor were 6 to 8 feet with winds blowing about 25 mph.

At 11 a.m., the center of Cristobal was about 15 miles east-southeast of Cape Lookout and about 70 miles southwest of Cape Hatteras, moving to the northeast near 7 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. That track was expected to continue for the next couple of days.

A tropical storm warning was in effect for north of Surf City to the Virginia-North Carolina border.

Maximum sustained winds were near 50 mph with higher gusts, with little change in strength expected.

Meteorologist Rich Bandy at the National Weather Service said the strong winds were on the eastern side of the storm, away from land.

"The only wind impacts are going to be on the immediate coast from Cape Lookout up to Oregon Inlet and that should be the worst of it," Bandy said of the northeast part of the state. The storm was expected to start pulling away from its coastline track about midnight after it passed Cape Hatteras, Bandy said.

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