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Hurricane Nicole approaches Florida’s east coast as Category 1 storm

This article is no longer being updated. Find the latest on Hurricane Nicole here.

TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — Hurricane Nicole is approaching Florida’s east coast as a Category 1 storm.

The storm became a Category 1 hurricane while it was making landfall on Grand Bahama Island on Wednesday evening.


The National Hurricane Center said the storm is bringing strong winds, dangerous storm surge and heavy rain to the area.

The storm made landfall as a tropical storm on Great Abaco Island around 1 p.m., with 70 mph winds.

By 10 p.m., Nicole was located about 35 miles north, northeast of Settlement Point Grand Bahama Island and about 75 miles from West Palm Beach, Florida, moving west at 13 mph. The storm was large with tropical storm-force winds extending outward up to 460 miles, mostly to the north of the center.

In anticipation of landfall, NHC issued a storm surge warning for residents between the Anclote River in Florida to the Ochlockonee River, which includes Tampa Bay.

A tropical storm warning was also issued for much of Florida’s west coast, including the Tampa Bay area. Hurricane and storm surge warnings and watches were in effect for the northwestern Bahamas and much of Florida’s east coast.

Gov. Ron DeSantis also declared a State of Emergency in 45 Florida counties, including all counties in the Bay area.

Officials in Volusia County were the first to announce mandatory evacuation orders for residents in mobile homes, low-lying areas, and other locations. Palm Beach County later announced evacuations for mobile home residents and those living on barrier islands.

A number of Tampa Bay school districts will close ahead of the storm.

The NHC said Nicole will likely move onshore in Florida within the hurricane warning late Wednesday night. Its center will move across central and northern Florida into Georgia on Thursday, then across the Carolinas Friday.

“Do not focus on the exact track of Nicole since it’s expected to be a large storm with hazards extending well to the north of the center, outside of the forecast cone,” the center said. “These hazards are likely to affect much of the Florida peninsula and portions of the southeast United States.

Florida will likely see heavy rainfall along with flash and urban flooding and possible renewed river rises on the St. John’s River, and a few tornadoes will be possible Wednesday evening through Thursday.

The storm could dump 3 to 5 inches of rain on parts of Florida and the Bahamas with some areas seeing isolated amounts of 8 inches. The southeastern US, southern and central Appalachians, western Mid-Atlantic, and eastern portions of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Ohio could see 2 to 4 inches of rain and the northern Mid-Atlantic and parts of New York could see 1 to 4 inches.

Swells generated by the storm — which can cause life-threatening surf and rip conditions — will likely affect the northwestern Bahamas, the east coast of Florida, and much of the southeastern United States coast over the next several days.

Tampa Bay will feel the brunt of Nicole on Thursday. The area should see winds with speeds of 20 to 40 mph, but wind gusts of up to 50 mph are possible.

Highlands, Polk and Citrus counties will likely see 3 to 6 inches of rain. The rest of the area could see 1 to 3 inches or slightly higher amounts.

“Flooding is not a huge concern with Nicole because the ground has had time to dry out since the flooding seen with Hurricane Ian. River levels are all back to normal and any rain that does fall, will first soak into the ground before moving toward the rivers. The Tampa Bay area will also see far less rain than Hurricane Ian brought,” said Storm Team 8 Meteorologist Amanda Holly.

Watches and Warnings

A hurricane warning is in effect for:

A tropical storm warning is in effect for:

A storm surge warning is in effect for

A hurricane watch is in effect for:

A storm surge watch is in effect for:

Other areas to watch

The NHC was also monitoring a low-pressure system about 600 miles west-southwest of The Azores, but it has no chance of developing into a tropical depression or storm in the next five days, according to forecasters.

“The low is moving northeastward and is expected to merge with a frontal system later today, therefore development is no longer anticipated.”

The next named storm of the 2022 hurricane season would be Owen.