Residents of western Nova Scotia and southern New Brunswick are being warned to prepare for power outages and localized flooding as hurricane Lee is expected to transition to a powerful post-tropical storm on Saturday as it makes landfall in the region. This photo provided by Austin Rebello shows fallen trees from a storm that passed on Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2023 in Killingly, Conn. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-HO, Austin Rebello, *MANDATORY CREDIT*
HALIFAX – Residents of western Nova Scotia and southern New Brunswick are being warned to prepare for power outages and localized flooding as hurricane Lee is expected to become a powerful post-tropical storm on Saturday when it makes landfall in the region.
The Canadian Hurricane Centre in Halifax issued a tropical cyclone statement this morning saying Lee’s track could take the storm through an area anywhere between New Brunswick’s Grand Manan Island and Nova Scotia’s Shelburne County on Saturday night.
The centre has repeatedly stressed that even though Lee is expected to transition from a Category 1 hurricane to a post-tropical storm, it will remain a threat, because the storm will expand and maintain much of its strength.
Environment Canada has issued hurricane watches for the southwestern Nova Scotia counties of Digby, Queens, Shelburne and Yarmouth, where hurricane-strength winds could gust as high as 120 kilometres per hour.
As well, a hurricane watch remains in effect for New Brunswick’s Grand Manan Island and the southern coast of Charlotte County, where gusts across the Bay of Fundy could also reach 120 kilometres per hour.
Residents of southwestern Nova Scotia and those living near the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick are also being warned that significantly higher water levels could lead to localized flooding and dangerous surf.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 14, 2023.