The center of Hurricane Erin was approximately 635 miles south of Cape May, New Jersey, 335 miles south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and 530 miles west of Bermuda as of Wednesday afternoon.
On Thursday, Erin's core is predicted to be spinning 350–400 miles southeast of Cape May at its closest pass. According to forecasters, the storm is close enough to deliver catastrophic rip currents, enormous waves, and wind gusts of 40 to 50 mph to beaches in Atlantic, Cape May, Monmouth, and Ocean counties.
The
National Weather Service predicts that the Jersey Shore will have minor to severe coastal flooding, with some communities potentially seeing major flooding, especially during high tide cycles Thursday evening through Friday evening.