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Beryl heads to Southeast coastal areas

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By the CNN Wire Staff

(CNN) — Hundreds of campers and day-trippers to Georgia’s Cumberland Island National Seashore were ordered to leave by Sunday afternoon as Tropical Storm Beryl was poised to make landfall Sunday night, the National Parks Service said.

Campers were told to be on the last ferry off the island, at 4:45 p.m. Sunday, said Pauline Wentworth of the parks service. Returning ferries Sunday afternoon have averaged about 100 passengers, she said.

Tropical storm conditions were forecast for areas of the Atlantic coast from northeastern Florida to southern South Carolina.

Beryl gained some intensity on Sunday, according to the National Hurricane Center, and will dump several inches of rain and bring high winds and coastal flooding to the area, putting a damper on the holiday weekend. The storm is forecast to make landfall in northeastern Florida Sunday night.

As of 5 p.m. Sunday, the center of Beryl was located about 85 miles east-southeast of Jacksonville, Florida, and about 110 miles southeast of Brunswick, Georgia, forecasters said. Packing maximum sustained winds of near 65 mph with higher gusts, Beryl was moving west at about 10 mph.

A tropical storm warning was in effect from the Volusia-Brevard county line in Florida to Edisto Beach, South Carolina.

“Tropical storm conditions are very near the coast of northeastern Florida and southeastern Georgia,” the hurricane center said. “These conditions are expected to spread across the coast during the next few hours and continue through tonight.” Hurricane-force gusts of at least 74 mph are possible in the region.

“I’ve been through a couple, but thank God, we made it through,” Flagler County, Florida, resident Jimmy Poole told CNN affiliate Central Florida News 13. “I know we’ve got to board the windows and be careful in the water, and I know the news is going to tell us what to do.”

A a storm surge and high tide will cause coastal flooding of 2 to 4 feet along the Florida and Georgia coasts and 1 to 2 feet along coastal South Carolina, forecasters said. Dangerous surf conditions including rip currents are expected through the weekend in the warning area.

Beryl is expected to dump 4 to 8 inches of rain along parts of the Southeastern coast, with isolated maximum amounts of 12 inches. Tropical storm-force winds of at least 39 mph extend outward up to 115 miles from the storm’s center, the hurricane center said.

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration buoy about 50 miles northeast of St. Augustine, Florida, recorded sustained winds of 43 mph with a gust to 52 mph, the hurricane center said.

After landfall, the forecast track shows Beryl circling around into southeastern Georgia and South Carolina before heading back out to sea Tuesday or Wednesday. The storm may strengthen slightly prior to landfall, forecasters said. Beryl is expected to weaken to a tropical depression while over land Monday.

The storm will bring much needed rain to the area, most of which is experiencing an “extreme” or “exceptional” drought, according to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, which tracks drought conditions nationwide.

Yet while some rain may be welcome, officials are warning of dangerous rip currents and strong winds.

“Residents and visitors along the northeast coast should closely monitor this system and use caution on roadways,” said Amy Godsey, Florida Division of Emergency Management state meteorologist, according to Central Florida News 13.

On Sunday morning, officials closed waters off Tybee Island, Georgia, to public use, according to CNN affiliate WSAV in Savannah, Georgia. The area was experiencing rain from rain bands associated with Beryl and waves of about 4 to 6 feet with strong rip currents.

A day earlier Tybee Island lifeguards conducted 48 rescues because of rip currents, WSAV said. It was the island’s second-busiest day on record for rescues behind July 3 of last year, officials said.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said in a statement that it was monitoring Beryl through its regional office in Atlanta, and deployed a liaison to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center to share information with the regional office and affected states.

Some, however, remained determined to enjoy their holiday regardless of the weather.

“We enjoy the storms. We live here,” Teri Hood told Central Florida News 13 from Jacksonville Beach. “As long as there are cocktails for the weekend, that’s it.”

CNN’s Ashley Hayes contributed to this report.