Hurricane Irene
This visible image was taken from the MODIS instrument on NASA's Aqua satellite on Aug. 21, 2011 at 17:45 UTC (1:45 p.m. EDT) when Irene was still a tropical storm approaching Puerto Rico (left). NASA Goddard MODIS Rapid Respo

As the forecast model matures, Hurricane Irene now appears headed on a path up Florida's east coast with a possible direct hit on Georgia and the Carolinas. Florida is far from out of the woods, and if the storm stays on track, the state could suffer significant damage from a couple of days of torrential rains and high winds.

But Georgia and the Carolinas are increasingly looking like they could take a direct hit from Hurricane Irene, possibly as a Category 3 storm containing winds of 115 miles per hour or higher. Before that happens, however, South Florida is almost a certainty to get hit, either directly or indirectly, with storm conditions mounting by Thursday.

The U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency is warning residents of South Florida to be on notice and get prepared.

If you're in south Florida, the agency said Monday, now is the time to get prepared.

The latest forecast models show a good chance Irene could strike somewhere along the U.S. East Coast by Friday morning. Models show winds could be 115 miles per hour or higher, and that the storm could take a day or two sweeping up Florida and possibly into Georgia and Carolinas, pummeling the region with heavy wind and rain.

Heavy rain, flooding and mudslides are possible in the Caribbean before the storm is forecast to track through parts of the Bahamas from late Tuesday night through early Friday morning. Then, the storm is likely to hit Florida or Georgia, possibly impacting the states with heavy rains and damaging winds for a couple of days.

Timing for U.S. impacts are possible as soon as Thursday in South Florida, and Thursday night and into Saturday for the rest of the state, Georgia and the Carolinas. But, forecasters said the odds or good for an indirect or direct hit of significant impact.

We definitely think it'll make landfall in the southeastern part of the U.S., said Kristina Pydnowski, a meteorologist with State College, Pennsyvlania-based Accuweather Inc., in an interview with Bloomberg.

The current storm track is uncertain, though the forecast will sharpen in the next 24-48 hours, but current models show Hurricane Irene could strike Florida as a Category 2 or Category 3 storm, with damaging potential.

Currently, the threat forecast for Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas is medium to high.

By late Monday, Irene packed winds of 80 miles per hour, and the storm was traveling north and northwest at 12 miles per hour.

On Sunday in San Juan, the storm dumped as much as 8 to 10 inches of rain as people sought shelter.

You can hear the wind, the gusts are relentless, said 59-year-old Maria Antonia Ordonez, as she secured the shutters of her house in historic Old San Juan after inviting neighbors over for dinner and wine to wait out the storm, according to The Associated Press. I can't see anything because I've closed everything.

The island of Hispaniola --which is shared by the Dominican Republic and Haiti -- still has many people who live without shelter after last year's earthquake that decimated Haiti and the region.

In Puerto Rico, at least 120,000 people were left without power and another 13,000 without water as the storm approached on Sunday.

Now, all eyes are on Irene to see if the storm strengthens and makes a strike on the U.S. East Coast. Indications on Monday morning are that Irene will strengthen over the next five days, tracking toward Florida and the Southeast U.S. on Wednesday night, Thursday and into the weekend, most likely as a Category 2 storm with winds of 100 to 110 miles per hour.

The latest forecasting models show Irene making a direct assault in a most likely path entering near Miami and continuing a path straight up the center up the state, reaching Jacksonville by early Saturday morning. If Irene does take that path, the state will be inundated by high winds and heavy rainfall for two to three days, potentially causing severe damage.

Residents of Florida are encouraged to closely monitor weather forecasts and possible evacuation notices.