"HALIFAX, N.S. —
Hurricane Dorian took down a crane, ripped roofs off apartments and uprooted trees as it charged across Nova Scotia Saturday.
But the province isn’t out of the woods yet.
“The storm is definitely not over,” Bob Robichaud, meteorologist at the Canadian Hurricane Centre, said at a news conference Saturday evening.
Dorian made landfall near Sambro Creek, roughly 25 kilometres from Halifax, with maximum wind gusts of 155 km/h around 6:15 p.m., according to the National Hurricane Centre.
While hurricane Dorian has been declared a post-tropical storm, as opposed to tropical cyclone hurricane Juan in 2003, Robichaud said the intensity isn’t different.
“It doesn’t mean it’s a weaker storm, not at all. It just means the structure of the storm is different,” he said.
“It’s a powerful storm. We should focus on what it’s bringing,” SaltWire Network meteorologist Cindy Day said, during a morning briefing with SaltWire Network reporters.
For Cape Breton, that meant peak wind gusts until about 3 a.m. Sunday. At that point the wind will change to the west and northwest at about 90 to 100 km/h. On P.E.I., "
Hurricane Dorian has more in store for Nova Scotia, P.E.I. overnight | The Compass