The
storm, about 285 miles (455 km) northeast of the northern
Leeward Islands, should pass north of Puerto Rico, the U.S.
Virgin Islands and other Caribbean islands.
Lee was packing winds of 120 mph (195 kph), the forecaster said.
It restrengthened to a Category 3 storm after being downgraded
to Category 2 earlier on Sunday and could see additional
strengthening during the next day or so, the National Hurricane
Center said.
The forecaster said swells affecting portions of the British and
U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Turks and Caicos,
the Bahamas and Bermuda are likely to cause life-threatening
surf and rip current conditions.
Dangerous surf and rip currents have begun to reach portions of
the U.S. southeast coast and could worsen and spread northward
during the next couple of days.
Sunday appeared to be just another hot and humid late summer day
in Puerto Rico's capital, San Juan, where people walked by the
beach or exercised, and businesses were open.
"So far it's just a normal day," Kelly Herrera, a guest service
agent at the Condado Vanderbilt Hotel on San Juan's beach front,
said in a phone interview.
Herrera said people were advised to stay away from the water in
preparation for swells and dangerous rip currents generated by
the storm.
The National Weather Service's office in Puerto Rico forecast
waves of 6 to 10 feet, possibly higher, in some coastal areas.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and
Leslie Adler)
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