With 145 mph Winds Hurricane Sam intensifies to Category 4 Status

  • With 145 mph Winds Hurricane Sam intensifies to Category 4 StatusForecasters are hoping Sam will stay far enough from land to avoid significant damage.
  • A dip in the jet stream would steer Sam away from the U.S.

On Sunday, Hurricane Sam stormed westward through the Atlantic Basin, a powerful Category 4 storm that forecasters hoped would stay far enough from land to avoid significant damage from its 145 mph winds and heavy rains.

AccuWeather forecasters said a due west path through the northern islands of the Caribbean seemed unlikely. AccuWeather meteorologist Bernie Rayno said that a dip in the jet stream would steer Sam away from the USA.

“But if that jet stream dip sets up farther west or meanders westward, then there is room for Sam to get very close to the U.S. next weekend,” Rayno said.With 145 mph Winds Hurricane Sam intensifies to Category 4 Status

That scenario, nine years ago, helped steer Superstorm Sandy west into New Jersey. Sandy was blamed for almost 300 deaths across multiple nations and damage of almost $70 billion.

AccuWeather meteorologists did not forecast a similar outcome to Sandy. Still, they warned of a range of possibilities for the hurricane’s track, including one scenario that could cause Sam to track very close to the USA.

“Even if Sam remains east of the U.S. late this week through next weekend, seas (could rise) along the Atlantic coast from central Florida to Maine with building surf and increasing rip currents,” AccuWeather senior meteorologist Rob Miller said.

Floodwaters surround homes near the Mantoloking Bridge the morning after hybrid storm Sandy rolled through, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, in Mantoloking, N.J.

‘Small but dangerous’: Sam strengthens to significant hurricane

That could begin as early as midweek along the southern part of the U.S. coast, then expand north into next weekend. A non-tropical storm associated with the jet stream could add to the intensity of the surf along part of the Atlantic coast and produce its zone of rain by late this week, AccuWeather said.

Some fluctuations in intensity are expected during the next day or so before Sam is likely to weaken slowly, the National Weather Service said.

Sam is the 18th named storm of the Atlantic season and the seventh hurricane. Only one other hurricane season – 2020 – on record has had 18 named storms at this point in the season. The remaining names on the list this year are Teresa, Victor, and Wanda.

A supplemental list approved by the World Meteorological Organization would replace the Greek alphabet used during last year’s record-breaking season. The supplemental list: Adria, Braylen, Caridad, Deshawn, Emery, Foster, Gemma, and Heath.

Rising seas, sinking land: Life on this Hurricane Ida-battered Louisiana barrier island may never be the same.

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