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Bermuda's Climate and Weather
Year-round temperatures and hurricanes, cooler in winter than
Caribbean
1,000 miles south
The climate is sub-tropical, mild in the winter, spring
and autumn (fall), but from late May to October, can be uncomfortably hot and with
especially high humidity. The hottest part of the year is from May through
mid-October, when temperatures hover between 75°F / 23°C and 85°F / 29°C.
Humidity, often well over 85%, is at its highest from July through
mid-October.
Despite its latitude and longitude - and its
location so far north of the Caribbean, nearly a thousand miles north of it in
fact - Bermuda is entirely frost-free,
snow-free and ice-free. Why? Because the warm waters of the Gulf Stream
pass near Bermuda.
However, it can be favorable
to hay fever sufferers. Rag weed does not exist in Bermuda and pollens
of other weeds are quickly blown out to sea. But note that for those with allergies.,
the always humid
climate breeds mold, mildew and mites. Some pharmaceuticals available without
prescription elsewhere require prescriptions in Bermuda from registered
local medical doctors. Not all drugstores in Bermuda are licensed dispensing
pharmacies. You will have to visit one of the latter in the City of Hamilton
or the Town of St. George to obtain anything locally prescribed but perhaps
not carried by a hotel drugstore.
Bermuda's ocean winds are tempered by the Gulf
Stream, but when south winds prevail, the humidity rises and sometimes
thunderstorms occur. The highest humidity months are July and August. Temperatures
rarely drop below 55 degrees F or exceed 90 degrees F. The lowest air temperature
ever recorded was 43.6F. The highest was 94F. Water temperatures during
winter months are much the same as the air temperature, ranging from about
66F (in January) through 75F until the late spring.
Enough annual rainfall is one reason why Bermuda
is usually lush in foliage and greenery despite its very shallow alkali
soil. There is no monsoon or rainy season because Bermuda is not in the
Caribbean, but some months tend to be wetter than others. But others can
be devoid of much rain. Also, several - like late June, July and August
in particular and early September - can be extremely (and unpleasantly)
humid. If this affects you badly, and you don't mind cooler water for swimming,
then try May or June or late September to October.
For weather forecasts, check the Bermuda
Weather Service page. It is a Bermuda
Government service, provided by the Ministry of Transport's Department
of Air Operations.
Bermuda average temperatures and rainfall by
month
Showing mean (average of high and
low for month) figures, much cooler in winter than the Caribbean or Florida.
Heading
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Air (F)
63
62.8
64.3
66.5
72.3
77.3
80.6
79.9
79
80.9
71.6
66.7
Sea (F), inshore
65.3
63.7
65.9
67.8
74.3
79.2
82.7
82.6
82.3
77.1
73.8
67.5
Rain (inches)
5.3
5.1
3.2
2.48
3.6
2.37
5.46
6.12
2.05
7.22
2.82
2.66
Number of rain days
16
16
13
9
6
8
14
19
9
13
14
13
Relative Humidity
73%
73%
71%
74%
79%
80%
81%
80%
72%
73%
72%
70%
Average daily
figures. They can vary substantially month-by-month. But on a year-by-year basis, the accumulated figures do not vary by
much.
Rain and rainstorms generate the
island's only supply of fresh water. There is no central piped-in water supply
except to a few few places. When there is insufficient rain, water is ordered
and paid for from Government reservoirs or seawater distillation plants and
delivered by water truckers.
Outdoors in December-February can be chilly at times, especially in frequent winter gales. Indoors, most
Bermudians don't have central heating in their homes as you do in USA,
Canada, Europe and UK, but open fires in one room or electric heaters. Bring some some wool
clothing in the winter months.
Bermuda Temperature Variations. The
year-round mean relative humidity is 77%. But in the months of May through
October, it is much higher. It is energy-sapping, debilitating, chronic,
with a need to change clothes three times a day. Most northern USA, UK, European
and Canadian nationals are not told about it and
some can get a very severe heat and humidity rash from it. For those potentially affected badly by a combination of heat and
high humidity, it is recommended that when you holiday in Bermuda, you come
in other - winter - months when humidity is lower.
Hurricanes
Beware the Hurricane!
Book by the late Bermudian author Terry Tucker.
2016. August 12. Residents may have
to brace themselves for another mighty storm after US forecasters predicted that
this year could be the busiest Atlantic hurricane season since 2012.
According to the Associated Press, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s updated outlook indicated 12 to 17 named storms, including
five to eight hurricanes — two to four of which could be “major”. On
average, the US gets 12 named Atlantic storms a season, including six
hurricanes, three of them major. The El Niño effect in the Pacific that tends
to reduce Atlantic hurricane activity is now dissipating. Gerry Bell, of
NOAA’s Climate Prediction Centre, said the opposite phenomenon, La Niña, may
form as the six-month season peaks, but should not have a significant impact.
2016. May 28. American-based
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has forecast a near-average
Atlantic hurricane season, but note “uncertainty” in the usual climate
signals. In a statement yesterday NOAA predicted a 70 per cent likelihood
that the Atlantic experiences ten to 16 named storms. Of those named storms,
four to eight could become hurricanes while one to four could become major
hurricanes, reaching Category 3 strength or above. “While a near-normal season
is most likely with a 45 per cent chance, there is also a 30 per cent chance of
an above-normal season and a 25 per cent chance of a below-normal season,” the
statement continued. The statement also noted that Hurricane Alex, which blew
through the North Atlantic in January, was included in the estimations. Gerry
Bell, lead seasonal forecaster with NOAA’s Climate Prediction Centre, said:
“This is a more challenging hurricane season outlook than most because it’s
difficult to determine whether there will be reinforcing or competing climate
influences on tropical storm development. “However, a near-normal prediction
for this season suggests we could see more hurricane activity than we’ve seen
in the last three years, which were below normal.” The statement noted,
however, there is a degree of uncertainty about the status of the Atlantic
Multi-Decadal Oscillation, an ocean temperature pattern that is believed to
cause increased hurricane activity during its “warm” phase, and La Niña, a
weather system associated with increased hurricane activity. The statement came
as the body was watching a subtropical system southwest of Bermuda which was
expected to become the second named storm of 2016. James Dodgson, acting
director of the Bermuda Weather Service, said that while some contributing
factors made it difficult to accurately forecast how busy the season would be,
even a single storm could have a great impact. “The best advice BWS can
provide, in association with any of these seasonal forecasts, whether they
suggest an active or inactive year, is to always be prepared, no matter what the
numbers are saying. It only takes one tropical cyclone (tropical storm or
hurricane) to make it a busy season for Bermuda, with potential significant
impacts.”
Hurricane off
Bermuda
In the event of hurricane forecasts, see special
Hurricane
links to the National Hurricane Center in the USA or The
Weather Channel. Some Bermuda hotels and guest properties have a Hurricane
Guarantee, which guarantees subject to certain conditions that if they cancel
because of a hurricane that prevents them from arriving, no penalty is
attached.
Studies conducted by the Bermuda
Weather Service found that from 1609 to the present day, devastating storms
affect the Island every six to seven years.
Our
tropical cyclone, or hurricane, season is from May through November, with an average of one
storm passing within 180 nautical miles of the Island every year.
Hurricanes are severe subtropical
or tropical storm with heavy rains and intense winds which blow in a large
circular motion around a center "eye." Hurricane season in the
Atlantic officially runs for six months, from June 1 to November 30. Most hurricanes
occur in August, September and October. Bermuda is usually quite well protected by its reefs but high waves
on top of a storm surge can cause problems in low lying areas close to the sea.
Hurricanes are not as prevalent
here as in the Caribbean, but they do occasionally visit our island once every
seven years or so.
When hurricanes strike, their damage to
hotels and private dwelling houses is often superficial compared to other
places. One major reason is because by law all
buildings must be solidly built out of Bermuda limestone or concrete blocks.
Compare this to coastal areas of the USA where wood, not stone, predominates.
While all of Bermuda is coastal - no part of Bermuda is more than 1.5 miles from
the sea - Bermuda lacks a
gradual undersea slope, which is a primary cause of severe storm surge. But
Bermuda's flora - trees, flowers, vegetation and the like - and fauna are not
protected from hurricanes in the way many buildings are. Bermuda often gets electrical
outages from gale force winds. This means no power for sometimes
hours or days or weeks - and because of the electrical outages no water can be
drawn, except manually in buckets if these are available, from underground tanks in local homes. Their only
way to get water for basins, baths, sinks, showers and toilets is by electrical
pumps from water tanks from each property. There is no central underground
water supply. Also, telephones can be out for weeks - and cable TV for
well over a month, as in September 2003. The most recent hurricanes were in
2014.
Hurricanes
affecting Bermuda, the Caribbean islands, North America, etc. used to be named
after saints, according to the book 'Hurricanes', by Ivan R. Tannehill.
Hurricane Santa Ana struck Puerto Rico in 1825, and two San Felipe hurricanes
reached the island in 1876 and 1928. The
Hurricane Center began giving Atlantic tropical storms people's names in 1953,
when the US abandoned a plan to name them after its phonetic military alphabet,
such as Able, Baker and Charlie. The
Geneva-based World Meteorological Organization now maintains the Atlantic lists
and ones for three areas of the Pacific Ocean; two sections of the Indian Ocean;
and the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Fiji and Australian regions. Those lists
are reused at different intervals and contain indigenous names, such as the Thai
name Prapiroon. All
the names were women's until 1978, when men's were included for some Pacific
storms. In 1979, male names were added to the list for the Atlantic and Gulf of
Mexico region, known as the Atlantic Basin. The names alternate between males
and females and also between English, French and Spanish origin.
2017 Hurricane Names
The following are the named storms that
may form in the North Atlantic in 2016:
Arlene
Bret
Cindy
Don
Emily
Franklin
Gert
Harvey
Irma
Jose
Katia
Lee
Maria
Nate
Orphelia
Philippe
Rina
Sean
Tammy
Vince
Whitney
Followed by the Greek
alphabet, if needed.
Names are given to tropical storms, which are those with sustained
winds of at least 39 miles an hour. When winds blow consistently at 74 miles an
hour or more, the storm becomes a hurricane.
Hurricane history (a) 1609-1962
that affected Bermuda
1609. Bermuda was colonized
in July as the direct result of a hurricane. On July 24, a hurricane sank one
ship and threw the flagship Sea Venture so far off course that it was
wrecked on a reef in Bermuda on July 28. All 150, including John
Rolfe and his pregnant wife were saved. But Mrs. Rolfe and her
daughter Bermuda died in Bermuda. The colonists rebuilt two boats from
the wreckage. See Admiral
Sir George Somers colonized Bermuda.
1619.
November 1619. A decade after the Sea Venture storm, another hurricane
struck the island, sending the Earl of Warwick's ship, Warwick,
to the shallow bottom of Castle Harbour.
1620.
After being toppled by a hurricane, Moore's Mount was rebuilt just after
Easter by Governor Butler as a triangular work.
1629.
At
St. George's, Butler's watchtower was thrown down the hill by a passing
hurricane.
1689. Governor Richard Coney
complained to the Lords of Council in London how great storms constantly made
him and his family take shelter at a neighbor's house.
1712.
September 8. The first of two severe hurricanes hit the Island.
Many of Bermuda’s historical buildings,
including St. Peter’s Church in St. George’s, were damaged. Since
Bermuda’s first settlers had built almost everything out of cedar
wood, including commercial buildings and churches, many were destroyed.
It was as a direct result of these hurricanes
that the decision was taken to construct buildings from limestone, as
opposed to wood and thus withstand hurricanes better. New
construction methods were developed to cut stone from hillsides to
create solid limestone buildings of which many still exist.
1780.
October 10.
one
of the most severe hurricanes ever recorded struck Bermuda. Fifty ships were
driven ashore, with much damage. Houses were destroyed. Cedar trees were torn up
bodily by the roots. The tide rose to a great height. It was known as
"The Great Hurricane" having earlier hit Barbados with winds
upwards of 200 miles per hour and caused widespread death and damage,
before marching up the West Indies chain and onwards to Bermuda. It's
death toll has not been exceeded.
1831.
August 11, 12, 13. Bermudians were amazed
to see the sun with a decidedly blue appearance,
giving off an eerie blue light when it shone into rooms and other enclosed
places. Ships at sea as far west as Cape Hatteras reported that "their
white sails appeared a light blue colour." A month later it was learned
that the astounding blue sunlight had coincided with a terrible hurricane that
caused 1,477 people to lose their lives. It was assumed that the hurricane was
intensive enough to cause unusual disturbance in the higher atmospheric strata,
and refraction, diffraction or absorption of light rays, to cause the blue
reflection.
1832. June.
Powerful gales swept Bermuda.
1839.
September. A hurricane caused great damage. It occurred while Sir
William Reid was here as Governor, which gave him further insights into
hurricanes, on which he had published the first scientific tome on such
a stormy topic the previous year.
1880. "Reid's"
Hurricane struck.
1889. September 12/13, a hurricane
devastated the Causeway linking St. George's Island to the Main Island. It had
to be rebuilt. Also destroyed was the Breakwater at the Dockyard, which had to
be repaired.
1900. September 17. Winds of
hurricane force. Near miss.
1915. September 3/4, a hurricane caused the steamer Pollokshields
to be wrecked on the reefs of the South Shore. The master lost his life. Heavy
rain and 82 mph winds.
1916. Hurricane on September
23.
1917. September 4, storm with
unprecedented tides.
1918. September 4/5.
Direct-hit hurricane.
1921. September 15. Almost
direct-hit hurricane, with 120 mph gusts.
1922.
Hurricane direct-hit on September 21. Winds to 120 mph and 8-foot storm surge.
1923. September 30. Storm
passed to NW with winds up to 62 mph.
1926.
October 22. Havana-Bermuda Hurricane Category 4 direct-hit, winds of 114 mph. It
killed 88 in Bermuda, caused the most destruction ever in Bermuda to
date and caused $100 million in damages. Category Four.
When it passed directly over the Island, there were wind gusts of up to
143 knots. Two British warships, the
Calcutta and the Valerian sank and the 88 who died during this storm
were all sailors and officers onboard the Valerian. It
was ultimately responsible for a total of 738 deaths, including 650
people in Cuba. See under this date in http://www.bermuda-online.org/history1900-1951.htm
1932. November 12. Storm
passed 100 miles to east, with wind gusts to 91 mph.
1939. October 16. Hurricane
passed 50 miles east, winds up to 100 mph with gusts 131 mph. Heavy rain.
1947. October 20. Hurricane 40
miles to NW with winds up to 100 mph.
1948(i). September 13. Hurricane
50 miles to west, 800-100 mph winds, telephones and power cut.
1948(ii). October 7. Hurricane
direct-hit. Winds 110 mph.
1953(i).
September 5. Hurricane Carol passed 200 miles west, giving Bermuda 50-60
mph winds.
1953(ii).
September 12. Tropical Storm Dolly passed over, but only with rain and
gales.
1953(iii).
September 17. Hurricane Edna passed within 50 miles with winds of
120 mph, torrential rain and much damage to roofs. Three
persons were injured.
1958.
September 28. Hurricane was 230 miles off, with 30 mph winds but
pounding surf.
1961. October
6/7. Hurricane Frances veered away, little wind but pounding surf.
1962.
October 6. Hurricane Daisy misses by 120 miles, winds to 66 mph with
heavy surf.
Hurricane history (b) 1963-present
that affected Bermuda
1963.
August 9. Hurricane Arlene a direct-hit, winds to 90 mph, much damage to
vegetation. She had been threatening the
Island for almost a week before she came ashore. In her wake she left
hundreds of boats, homes and vast areas of vegetation destroyed or
damaged. It was the first time in a decade that a hurricane had not
veered its course away from the Island.
1964.
The outer bands of Hurricane Gladys lashed Bermuda with winds but little
damage if any was officially reported. However, it caused some problems.
At the USA's Naval
Operating Base, Bermuda, the emergency duty station for military
personnel based there was the motor pool, which at that time was located
in the old seaplane hanger. They were safe enough, but were basically
trapped without food. Several attempted to reach the galley for supplies
but were driven back by the storm. At one point the eye passed directly
over the base. They jumped into several vehicles and raced to the mess
hall to stock up of food and ran back to the hanger as the eye passed by
and the storm resumed. Other than the above-mentioned US Navy base in Southampton
Parish, which had it's own power house and
underground utilities the only light visible from the base was Gibbs
Hill Lighthouse.
1965.
Hurricane Anna was not a direct threat to Bermuda.
1966.
August 31. Fringe of Hurricane Faith, heavy rain and winds to 62 mph.
1971.
September 23. Hurricane Ginger passed south of Bermuda, with heavy
waves and gale force winds for 17 hours. But there was no loss of life
or damage. The hurricane's passage failed to alleviate persistent
drought conditions. However, the threat caused the Royal Navy presence
in Bermuda to evacuate a ship, the US military evacuated some aircraft
and two visiting cruise ships left early to avoid the threat.
1973.
July 3/4. Hurricane Alice, minimal 26 miles away, but heavy rain.
1975.
September 26. Hurricane Faye 40 miles away, strong winds, heavy rain.
1977.
September 27. Hurricane Dorothy 60 miles to SE, heavy rain.
1981.
September 7. Hurricane Emily passed over, only with 35 mph winds.
1987.
September 25. Hurricane Emily, only a Category One, moved unexpectedly swiftly,
causing tornados,
chaos and much damage. With wind gusts
recorded up to 125 mph, many were caught off guard as the storm was
expected to miss the Island. Small, but
vicious and spawning several tornadoes, Emily caused widespread chaos
and damage - mostly to cars and boats, though houses experienced severe
damage during the storm’s passage as well. St.
George’s was hit hard, as was the Hamilton Princess hotel when all 80
windows shattered. More than 100 people were treated at King Edward VII
Memorial Hospital for broken bones from flying debris and part of the
hospital’s roof was blown off. Ultimately
Emily caused $35 million in damage to the Island. No
one was killed but Emily was the strongest hurricane to hit Bermuda
since 1948.
1989.
August 4. Tropical Storm Dean 23 miles away with 90 mph winds.
1991.
October 27/29. Hurricane Grace forms in Bermuda area, hovers, gave
massive seas.
1995.
August 14. Hurricane Felix 50 miles away, winds up to 75 mph,
pounding surf for 3 days on South Shore. Felix was expected to pass
within 14 miles of Bermuda but suddenly veered away, saving the Island
from a direct impact. Despite that, Bermuda felt hurricane-strength
winds for more than eight hours, and a long-awaited Independence
referendum had to be postponed. The storm cut the power to around 18,000
homes and caused an estimated $2.5 million in damages.
1996.
October 20. Hurricane Lily 140 miles to SE, rain and 42-knot winds.
1997.
October 8/9. Hurricane Erika 300 miles away, no damage.
1998(i).
September 2/3. Hurricane Danielle 200 miles NW. Rain, thunderstorms,
winds to 46 mph.
1998(ii).
September 21/22. Hurricane Karl formed near Bermuda. Winds were up to 44
mph with heavy showers and thundershowers.
1998
(iii).
November 6. Hurricane Mitch. Extensive damage beyond Bermuda but heavy
rain and wind gusts in Bermuda to 69 mph.
1999.
September 21. Hurricane Gert passed 120 miles east of Bermuda. Wind
gusts of up to 75 mph, many beaches damaged.
2000.
September 16. Hurricane Florence 60 miles away. Winds up to 50 knots.
2001(i).
September 9. Hurricane Erin was 90 miles to E. But with only tropical
storm force winds that caused battering waves and some coastal erosion.
2001.(ii)
October 7. Tropical Storm Michelle threatened but fizzled on approach.
Little damage.
2001.
(iii). October. Although
Karen didn’t become a hurricane until she was already moving away from
the Island, the system caught Bermuda by surprise, rapidly building from
a low-pressure disturbance to a tropical storm on our doorstep. Winds
reached 74mph, near-hurricane status, destroying vegetation and downing
power lines, leaving more than two-thirds of the Island without power.
2002.
September 30. Hurricane Kyle came within 100 nautical miles to the south, but with little effect.
2003.
September 5. Hurricane Fabian ravaged Bermuda. It
was the strongest storm to hit Bermuda's coast in four decades. It
began mildly when Bermuda woke to winds gusting between 25 mph and 37
mph as Hurricane Fabian had it sights set on Bermuda. The hurricane
approached the Island from the south, south-west and moved north. The
eye of the storm, which was 50 miles from north to south and 30 miles
from east to west, then travelled across the Island bringing the highest
winds. The wall of the eye skirted to the West sitting on the Island for
about three hours in the north-east quadrant, traditionally the
strongest part of the storm. By 5.55 p.m. when the strongest winds of
150 mph were recorded, the Island had already lost four lives on the
Causeway. They all died when they
were swept from the Causeway during the hurricane. P.C.
Stephen Antoine Symons, 37, P.C. Nicole O'Connor, 29, Station Duty
Officer, Gladys Saunders, 48, were trapped on the bridge in one car.
Stephen Antoine Symons 'Chicken', 37, was one of two officers escorting
Station Duty Officer Gladys Saunders, back to her home in Duck's Puddle,
Hamilton Parish. A civilian, Manuel Pacheco, 23, an employee of the
Corporation of Hamilton, was stuck in a second care behind them at about
2.30 p.m. He was returning home after securing his boat in St. David's.
Although attempts were made to save them, fire fighters, police officers
and a constructions worker had to abort the mission when the storm
became too bad. The body of P.C. Symons was found two days later and the
other victims were never seen again. During
the day of Fabian there were reported gusts closer to 160 mph, however,
around 4.55 p.m. the Bermuda Weather Service's monitoring equipment had
shorted as water surged eight feet above sea level and recording stopped
for two hours. The Weather Service crew
were lucky to still have equipment to monitor after their meteorologist
Brian Kolts told the Royal Gazette that five more knots would have blown
the roof off their bombproof US military-made shelter. At
about 6.55 p.m., the eye was north of Bermuda and the winds switched
direction to come from a westerly direction on the comparatively weaker
side of the storm. And by 11.55 p.m the
next day, the hurricane winds had officially passed over the Island,
with sustained speeds of 40 knots (46 mph) gusting to 52 knots (60 mph)
hitting the Island. From then on, there
was a steady decline in wind speed as Fabian blew out into the Atlantic
northwards, and by 4.55 a.m. on Saturday the Weather Centre was barely
registering tropical storm conditions, with sustained winds at 36 knots
(41 mph). But what it left in it's wake
was anything but calm. Estimated costs for damage from the storm ran in
the area of $300 million. Around 25,000
out of 32,000 homes and businesses were left without power, though by
mid-afternoon on Sunday, BELCO reported that 11,000 homes had their
power restored. A 20-strong team from
the Caribbean Electric Association, in Cayman, arrived on the Tuesday to
offer help where they could. The East
End of the Island, however, was cut-off for days after the Causeway was
impassable. Days later it was open to one-way traffic, but still closed
at night and finally in October the main artery of the Island was
running as normal. Bermuda's hotels
suffered, with the majority of the Sonesta Beach Hotel's roof flying off
and the Fairmont Southampton also struggled to replace its roof. Fabian
conveniently hit at the beginning of the school year and meant the
opening of Government schools was delayed a week and they did not open
until September 15. St. George's prep
spent months recovering after the storm which wreaked havoc on the
building and two years after Hurricane Fabian ravaged the Island The
Department of Parks and the Ministry of Works and Engineering started
repairing the entrance to Church Bay, which was badly damaged. Later,
the
September 5th Foundation, a registered charity, erected a memorial bench
in Kindley Field Park, near to the scene of the tragedy. The foundation
since created a scholarship fund for the Fabian victims' children.
2006.
September.Hurricane Florence caused only superficial damage
overall. 23,000 out of 68,500 residents had electricity outages.
Only one hotel was damaged, with the beach of another having
disappeared. American and Canadian newspapers, Internet services and
other news sources gave the hurricane extensive coverage but there was
no mention of it in the United Kingdom's BBC or newspapers or European
equivalents.
2010.
September 19. Hurricane Igor, predicted to be a monster
storm — a 500-nautical-mile-wide Category Three — the system
collapsed before landing, but side-swiped the island during
the night with high winds, waves, rain and some flooding in places.
However, caused no deaths or serious injuries. Damage was mostly superficial as
homes and hotels are stone-built, not wood. But trees fell onto roads
and electricity, cable TV, radio, television and Internet outages
occurred. No mention in the UK. The hurricane was reduced to a Category
One storm by the time it neared the Island, and did not come as close as
anticipated. However the storm still caused flooding in Somerset and St
George’s and tore several boats from their moorings, including
Government tender Bermudian. Around 80 percent of Belco customers,
28,700 homes and businesses, lost power. Electricity was restored to all
but 5,600 homes the next day.
2012. September 5. Tropical Storm Leslie posed a threat but did not
last.
2014. October
12. Bermuda was hit hard by Tropical Storm Fay which had been forecast by
US sources to
pass to the east as a mere tropical storm or category one Hurricane. Instead, it strengthened suddenly
and passed directly over Bermuda without any prior warning. Residents experienced 80-120 mph
gusting winds later reported to have peaked at 155 mph. Coconut trees
and other trees collapsed, blocking access to houses. Many roofs were
damaged. All schools were closed and one lost its roof. Two thirds of homes lost electricity
when overhead power
lines were blown down. Electricity outages
meant no power, no running water, no flushing toilets, no fridges or air
conditioning, no radio or TV or Internet. Many boats were wrecked and
shipping containers were blown from the Port Of Hamilton into the harbour.
This was a fast, furious but short-lived hurricane.
2014.
October 17. Bermuda received a direct hit from Hurricane Gonzalo
only a week after its last event, but because of earlier warnings, this
time was well-prepared. Airlines stopped flying beforehand for the
duration and cruise ships, intended for Bermuda, visited other ports
instead. Once again coconut trees
and other trees collapsed, blocking access to houses. Some roofs were
damaged or lost. All business and schools closed early. Two thirds of homes lost electricity. Electricity outages
meant no power, no running water, no flushing toilets, no fridges or air
conditioning, no radio or TV or Internet. Some boats were wrecked.
Britain's Royal Navy sent a warship to help recovery efforts and
Caribbean (from 900 miles away) electricity suppliers were on standby.
2015. October 4. Hurricane Joaquin passed within 75 miles of Bermuda,
lashing the island with torrential rain. But there was no major damage.
2016. September 24. Tropical Storm Karl brushed past the island with
minimal impact, but more than 800 Belco customers were without power —
and the Department of Parks is advising swimmers to avoid waters on all
South Shore beaches, as the surge remained high.
2016. October 13.Hurricane Nicole, then at Category 4, hit
Bermuda. It behind some serious damage to the island’s
infrastructure. It caused walls and roads to collapse, tore roofs off
buildings, ripped up trees, smashed boats against rocks and flooded
numerous homes and roads. Walls were damaged along the Causeway, the
only route to and from the airport. The Royal Bermuda Regiment was a
principal player during and after. Many power lines were downed.
Flooding victims included Victor Scott Primary School, while Bailey’s
Bay Cricket Club’s structure suffered extensive damage. Residents near
Elbow Beach report a significant outflow from a broken pipe. Other
damages are significant. No major marine incidents took place during the
storm. Many houses around the island were damaged. Nicole was the
biggest hurricane of recent years to make landfall.
American system of hurricane
assessment - used in
Bermuda
The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane
Scale classifies
hurricanes thus:
1. Pressure 28.94
inches or more. Wind
speed of 74 to 95 mph, 4-5 foot storm surge but not much damage.
2. Pressure 28.50-28.93
inches. Wind
speed of 96 to 110 mph, storm surge 6-8 feet., moderate damage.
3. Pressure 27.91-28.49
inches. Wind
speed of 111 to 130 mph, storm surge 9-12 feet, damage extensive.
4. Pressure 27.17-27.9 inches.
Wind
speed of 131 to 155 mph, storm surge 13-18 feet, damage very extensive.
5. Pressure less than 27.17
inches, winds greater than 155 mph, storm surge higher than 18 feet,
catastrophic damage