Hurricane Imelda swirls away from Bermuda
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While it's not forecast to make landfall in the U.S., Imelda is bringing dangerous surf and rip currents to the East Coast.
Hurricane Humberto's swells will probably cause "life-threatening surf and rip current conditions," the National Hurricane Center warned.
The Florida Panhandle could see some impacts from a potential tropical disturbance forecast to form near the southern Florida coast.
To put how bizarre a storm preventing a landfall is into perspective, the now post-tropical Humberto and Imelda were closer than any two hurricanes in at least 50 years as they swept out to sea.
Forecasts for early October indicate that there's almost certainly more activity to come. On Oct. 2, two new potential storms were developing.
Hurricane forecasters highlighted two new disturbances in the Atlantic Ocean Thursday morning, including a potential area of low pressure that could bring rain to the Gulf Coast. The low-pressure system could form in the next couple of days near southern Florida, forecasters with the National Hurricane Center in Miami said at 7 a.m. Thursday.
Forecasters warned of dangerous surf and "life-threatening" rip currents at beaches of the northern Caribbean, Bahamas, Bermuda and much of the U.S. East Coast as Hurricane Humberto dissipated in the Atlantic.
The advisory also states that the storm is moving east-northeast at 24 mph with maximum sustained winds of 100 mph toward Bermuda and away from the southeastern United States. Bermuda is currently under a hurricane warning. Imelda is expected to pass near Bermuda late Wednesday, Oct.1, according to the advisory.
Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, 11 a.m. ET Article last updated: Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, 11 p.m. ET System type: Hurricane, Category 4 System name: Humberto The National Hurricane Center's 11 p.m. Monday update reported that Category 4 Hurricane Humberto is in the Atlantic Ocean,