Hurricane Erin, NYC Parks
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Hurricane Erin has weakened to a Category 1 storm after lashing North Carolina's Outer Banks with rough waves and coastal flooding, and bringing a threat of dangerous waves and potentially deadly rip currents to the East Coast.
Hurricane Erin continues to cause dangerous beach conditions across the New York City area on Friday. Even as warm summer weather returns to the area, Erin is offshore in the Atlantic churning up dangerous surf and rip currents from the Jersey Shore to Long Island,
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ABC7 New York on MSNHurricane Erin latest: Strong rip currents remain along Jersey Shore and Long Island
Hurricane Erin downgraded to a post-tropical Friday evening, but some beaches will remain closed to swimming through Saturday as strong rip currents continue to create dangerous conditions.
As Hurricane Erin moved up the East Coast, surfers in and around New York City, who are known to put on hooded wet suits in February to chase decent waves, are enjoying the rarity of the best waves of the season on a summer day.
Swimming will be prohibited at all New York City beaches Wednesday and Thursday as Hurricane Erin is threatening to bring dangerous rip currents and waves as large as 13 feet to shores all along
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The Mirror US on MSNNew York weather: Erin leaves beaches too dangerous to enter even as skies clear
The worst of hurricane Erin's effects may be over for Tri-State area residents but serious dangers still persist along coastlines prompting experts to urge caution as brighter and warmer weekend weath
Hotspots including Rockaway Beach, Coney Island and Manhattan Beach were shuttered Friday as massive waves and strong rip tides threatened suck away swimmers and surfers. State-run Long Island Beaches were closed just for swimming.