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Hurricane Helene is surging toward the southeast US. And it’s gaining power.

Fast-moving Hurricane Helene was advancing Sept. 26 across the Gulf of Mexico toward Florida, threatening an “unsurvivable” storm surge in northwestern parts of the state as well as damaging winds, rains, and flash floods hundreds of miles inland across much of the southeastern United States, forecasters said.

Helene was upgraded the morning of Sept. 26 to a Category 2 storm and is expected to be a major hurricane – meaning a Category 3 or higher – when it makes landfall on Florida’s northwestern coast the evening of Sept. 26. As of early in the day Sept. 26, hurricane warnings and flash flood warnings extended far beyond the coast up into south-central Georgia. The governors of Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, and Virginia have all declared emergencies in their states.

Rain was beginning to blow in the predawn darkness Sept. 26 along coastal U.S. Highway 98, which winds through countless fishing villages and vacation hideaways along Florida’s Big Bend. Shuttered gas stations dotted the two-lane highway, their windows boarded up with plywood to protect from the storm. The road was largely empty at first light on Sept. 26, with what drivers there were mostly heading northeast, towards higher ground.

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