Gaston Brings Rain, Wind to
S.C. |
(Columbia) - Governor Mark Sanford declared
a state of emergency throughout South Carolina as Tropical Storm
Gaston moved through the state Sunday.
About 150-thousand
people were without power as Gaston downed trees and power
lines.
Williamsburg County residents sloshed through as much
as 10 inches of rain and the National Weather Service said flash
flooding was likely in Clarendon and Sumter
counties.
Sanford says he is worried so many light brushes
with hurricanes and tropical storms in the past month may lead
people to ride out a major storm when they should be evacuating.
Sanford says some might think the next hurricane is not a
big deal and that they'll stay around for instead of heading to
safety inland.
Winds gusted to 81 mph Sunday morning at a
mobile weather station near the Isle of Palms. East Cooper airport
had a wind gust to 73 mph. The Coast Guard station in downtown
Charleston has reported winds gusting to 61 mph.
Heavy rains
accompanied the storm inland. As of 5 p.m. Manning had reported 5.0
inches of rain while Santee reported 3.6 inches.
Doppler
rainfall estimates were quite high across Charleston, Dorchester,
Berkeley, and Williamsburg counties. Estimates of 5 to 10 inches of
rain were made by radar. However, the actual rain was almost twice
the estimate. It is likely rainfall was in the 8 to 18 inch range.
Likewise, rainfall amounts west of Kingstree in Williamsburg county
will likely 10 to 20 inches.
Another area feeling Gaston's
impact was South Carolina's Grand Strand.
Business owners in
Myrtle Beach closed up shop on Ocean Blvd.
The streets,
usually packed with tourists, were empty as the storm blew ashore
with swift winds and heavy rains.
Gaston also made his mark
on Pawley's Island. Several homes there had their shingles blown off
and windows were knocked out by the effects of the storm.
On
Litchfield Beach the island suffered some erosion. |
Related
links: News 19 Live Double Doppler Radar
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