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As it approaches the Atlantic archipelagos, Hurricane Erin is bringing rough seas.

As it approaches the Atlantic archipelagos, Hurricane Erin is bringing rough seas.

Residents of the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos were bracing themselves for the first Atlantic hurricane of the season, Category 4 Erin. It had strengthened over the weekend as it swept through the Caribbean.

Erin is yet to cause any significant damage or landfall.

National Hurricane Center of the United States (NHC) stated that Erin would strengthen a bit on Monday, but will bypass northern Atlantic islands. The storm will probably remain a major hurricane until the middle of this week but avoid Bermuda and the U.S. coastline.

The storm had maximum sustained winds of 225 kph (140 mph) on Monday, 1500 GMT. It was circling north of Hispaniola.

The strength of the storm fluctuated throughout the weekend. It rose on Saturday to Category 5 (the highest level on the Saffir-Simpson Scale), before dropping back down to Category 4 in the late hours of Sunday.

The NHC stated that Erin's wind field would result in rough conditions on the ocean over most of the western Atlantic. It said it would become larger than the current tropical storm force winds, which extend up to 230 mile (370 km) away from its center.

Erin, the fifth named storm in the Atlantic Season of 2025 and the first hurricane to reach the category, is expected to make landfall on the coast. Last October, Hurricane Milton was the last Atlantic storm that reached Category 5 intensity.

Dominican Republic placed its northern coast under alert last weekend but there were no reports of major damage.

Authorities in Turks and Caicos (an overseas British territory) have suspended services on the island's largest island and warned residents to prepare for evacuation.

The Bahamas' Meteorology Department said that the southeast of the islands, including Turks and Caicos were experiencing tropical storms and that boats shouldn't go out at sea until the end the week.

It said that the seas "could become extremely rough and hazardous during the swells".

The NHC warned that strong currents will be sweeping across the east coasts of Canada and the U.S. in the next few days.

BMS Meteorologist Andrew Siffert said Erin could pass off-shore along Canada's Maritime Provinces, without causing heavy rain. He called this a "gray swan event".

He warned that sustained winds could increase the risk of fires.

(source: Reuters)