BOSTON (AP) — Rip currents are one of the coast’s greatest dangers and account for the most beach rescues every year. Hurricane Erin is bringing the potentially deadly currents to the East Coast this ...
Hurricane Erin is barreling along the Atlantic seaboard and bringing with it dangerously high water levels, waves and rip currents. The safest move is to avoid the water altogether, but knowing what ...
Red flags are flying again along the Florida coast because of rip currents caused by bad weather out in the Atlantic. Nearly 300 people had to be rescued along Volusia County’s beaches last weekend ...
As the NEXT Weather Team watches Hurricane Humberto and Tropical Storm Imelda, rip currents may be the biggest threat South Florida will face now through Monday. Along the beaches of Broward and Miami ...
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Caught in a rip current? Learn how to spot one—and survive with ‘Flip, Float and Follow’
Hurricane Erin remains offshore as it moves northward along the U.S. Southeast coast today, continuing to generate large Atlantic waves that will pose dangerous surf and marine hazards through Friday.
On Saturday at 12:33 p.m. the National Weather Service issued a rip current statement valid from Sunday 1 p.m. until Tuesday 10 a.m. The statement is for Pinellas, Hillsborough, Manatee, Sarasota, ...
If the wind is blowing steadily toward the shore, the risk of rip currents increases, but other factors and features can also make them more likely. They are not always easy to spot, so these are said ...
Hurricane Erin is moving northeast, away from the U.S. coast, but impacting Florida beaches with rip currents and high surf. The National Weather Service has issued hazardous weather advisories for ...
The National Weather Service released a special rip current statement, effective Sunday afternoon.
Two surfers were caught in a rip current off Oregon’s Cape Kiwanda beach Saturday afternoon, spurring a rescue effort by the ...
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