Hurricane watches issued for southwestern Nova Scotia and southern New Brunswick
HALIFAX — Residents of the Maritimes are being warned to prepare for damaging winds, large waves, flooding and power outages as hurricane Lee is expected to transform into a large, powerful post-tropical storm Saturday after entering Canadian waters.
The Canadian Hurricane Centre in Halifax said Thursday that Lee’s track could take the storm anywhere between southwestern New Brunswick and southwestern Nova Scotia. But the immensity of the storm means its point of landfall won’t mean much.
As Lee transitions from a Category 1 hurricane to a post-tropical storm, meteorologists say it will remain a threat because it will expand and maintain much of its strength across an area extending 300 kilometres from its centre.
Environment Canada has issued hurricane watches for the southwestern Nova Scotia counties of Digby, Queens, Shelburne and Yarmouth, where hurricane-strength winds could gust as high as 120 kilometres per hour on Saturday. As well, a hurricane watch is in effect for Grand Manan and the southern coast of Charlotte County in New Brunswick, where gusts across the Bay of Fundy could also reach 120 km/h.

