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US dodges direct strike by Hurricane Erin, but coastal dangers remain

by LJ News Opinions
August 21, 2025
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Erin’s impacts are being felt on the Outer Banks, where massive waves are crashing onto the beaches and tropical storm-force winds are gusting in Nags Head. FOX Weather Correspondent Katie Byrne reports on the beach: 

NEW YORK – The United States avoided a direct strike from Hurricane Erin this week, but the storm’s large size and powerful outer bands still caused significant disruptions along parts of the East Coast.

Erin, which reached Category 5 intensity while north of the Caribbean, came within about 200 miles of North Carolina’s Outer Banks on Thursday, causing overwash to swamp roadways and erode protective dunes.

Videos and photos taken Thursday morning along North Carolina’s Highway 12 – the main thoroughfare through the Outer Banks – showed long stretches of the coastal highway underwater during high tide.

Officials with the North Carolina Department of Transportation shut down a nearly 50-mile stretch of the roadway because of the hazards but gave no indication of when it would reopen to residents and travelers.

Authorities said inspections had not uncovered major structural damage to bridges or highways, but sand and debris removal was expected to be extensive.

  • Flooding in Avalon, New Jersey on 8/21/2025

    Flooding in Avalon, New Jersey on 8/21/2025 
    (@DJonesBagOBones)

  • Rough surf in Ocean City, Maryland on Aug. 21, 2025 due to Hurricane Erin.

    Rough surf in Ocean City, Maryland on Aug. 21, 2025 due to Hurricane Erin.
    (Brandy Campbell)

  • Rough surf in Ocean City, Maryland on Aug. 21, 2025 due to Hurricane Erin.

    Rough surf in Ocean City, Maryland on Aug. 21, 2025 due to Hurricane Erin.
    (Brandy Campbell)

  • Ocean City, Maryland

    Rough surf in Ocean City, Maryland on Aug. 21, 2025 due to Hurricane Erin.
    (Brandy Campbell)

  • NC Flooding

    Storm surge floods a hotel in Buxton, N.C. as Hurricane Erin swirls offshore on Aug. 20, 2025.
    (Mark Sudduth)

  • North Carolina Highway 12 Closed

    Heavy surf and storm surge from Hurricane Erin shut down North Carolina’s Highway 12 on Aug. 20, 2025.
    (NC Dept. of Transportation)

  • North Carolina Highway 12 Closed

    Heavy surf and storm surge from Hurricane Erin shut down North Carolina’s Highway 12 on Aug. 20, 2025.
    (NC Dept. of Transportation)

  • Overwash in Hatteras Island, North Carolina as Hurricane Erin's biggest impacts begin on Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025.

    Overwash in Hatteras Island, North Carolina as Hurricane Erin’s biggest impacts begin on Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025. 
    (Jenni Koontz/Epic Shutter Photography/Dare County)

WATCH: NORTH CAROLINA MAN ‘OBLITERATED’ AS HURRICANE ERIN WAVE SMASHES INTO SAND DUNE

That same message was echoed up and down the Eastern Seaboard, where officials reported relatively little in the way of significant impacts despite the power of the hurricane.

In several northeastern states, authorities reported that low-lying coastal areas did see flooding with the evening’s high tide.

In southern New Jersey, residents in West Wildwood navigated the inundated streets using surfboards and other small flotation craft, appearing to take the event in stride.

Ahead of the hurricane, Governor Phil Murphy declared a state of emergency for 21 counties and warned that dangers would persist at least through Friday.

A North Carolina man was hit by a strong wave from Hurricane Erin as he stood on a sand dune in Hatteras, North Carolina, on Wednesday.

A North Carolina man was hit by a strong wave from Hurricane Erin as he stood on a sand dune in Hatteras, North Carolina, on Wednesday.

Even though the hurricane is hundreds of miles away, forecasters said Erin’s size would allow rip currents and rough seas to continue along much of the East Coast through the weekend.

Officials have been warning beachgoers for days to stay out of the water, citing hundreds of rescues as evidence of the ocean’s power.

Track of Hurricane Erin
(FOX Weather)

 

HURRICANE ERIN SHUTS DOWN RAINY WEATHER PATTERN ACROSS FLORIDA, INCREASING WILDFIRE DANGERS

There have been no reports of missing swimmers as of Thursday evening, but lifeguards cautioned against going into the water, especially during one of the final weekends of summer, with many coastal communities busy with visitors.

North Carolina Governor Josh Stein is expected to visit coastal areas on Friday to assess damage and the status of reopening efforts.

Elsewhere in the tropics, the National Hurricane Center said it is monitoring a few disturbances in the Atlantic basin, but the FOX Forecast Center noted that due to the prevailing weather pattern over North America, none of the systems pose a threat to the continental United States.

Rip current risk
(FOX Weather)

 



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