SB QST @ ARL $ARLB038 ARLB038 Hurricane Watch Net activates for Erin ZCZC AG38 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 38 ARLB038 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT September 10, 2001 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB038 ARLB038 Hurricane Watch Net activates for Erin The Hurricane Watch Net and operators at W4EHW at the National Hurricane Center in Miami activated for 11 hours over the weekend to keep an eye on Hurricane Erin. The storm, now considered a major hurricane, continues to move away from Bermuda, which had been threatened this weekend. The Hurricane Watch Net and W4EHW activated September 9 at 1100 UTC and terminated operations at 2200 UTC after the storm had passed east of Bermuda with no significant impact. W4EHW Assistant Amateur Radio Coordinator Julio Ripoll, WD4JR reports that W4EHW received many live surface reports from Bermuda. W4EHW operated on the Hurricane Watch Net frequency of 14.325 MHz as well as on the Bermuda Emergency Net frequency 14.275 MHz. Ripoll and the Hurricane Watch Net's Mike Pilgrim, K5MP, reported that up to a half dozen Bermuda hams provided storm data, including measured weather surface reports and visual observations of the surf. As of this morning, the storm--with maximum sustained winds of 120 MPH--was in the Atlantic--some 585 miles south of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, and moving north-northwest at around 10 MPH. Forecasters say the storm poses only a small risk to land and give it a less than 10 percent chance of coming within 65 miles of the Eastern US Seaboard or Maritime Canada. A gradual turn to the north was expected. Tropical storm-force winds extend some 175 miles from the storm's center. The Hurricane Watch Net http://www.hwn.org activates 14.325 MHz whenever a hurricane is within 300 miles of projected landfall or becomes a serious threat to a populated area. NNNN /EX