Sunshine up here in panhandle. Hope you fair well down there. Batten down the hatches! Seen many naders down south.I've had Tornado warnings since 12 noon today for my area. This is a mean little bastard for sure. Some spotty down pore rains and a little wind so far.
I am expecting between 60 to 90 mph winds to start around midnight.
These Sons a bitches always hit here at night. The last one that did not was Charlie.
You ready for this @rd45usa ? I am as ready as I can get.
Sunshine up here in panhandle. Hope you fair well down there. Batten down the hatches! Seen many naders down south.
Thanks. I think we'll be ok.Good Luck @Doc Austin .
Looks like the eye is going right over us, but it will be a cat 2 by then.Downgraded to cat 3
It's unbelievable. Give him to someone else or at least let him go so he has a chance.It really takes a worthless lowbred human being to do something like that.
Keep your head down.Looks like the eye is going right over us, but it will be a cat 2 by then.
Looks like the eye is going right over us, but it will be a cat 2 by then.
I'm on the west coast but follow these horrible storms and can't grasp how bad it must be for everyone. I feel so bad in so many ways. I hate wind anyway but this kind of thing goes beyond anything we get around here.
Not in FL. There's a gubernatorial exemption, remember?And both are getting worse because of climate change.
Typically, the wind isn't the problem, but Milton was a monster. Usually, those 80-100 mph (or higher) wind gusts are very concentrated with major hurricanes.
Milton's wind field was very large, and the tornadoes it spun up were unprecedented. Usually, you get some small, scattered tornadoes that don't do a lot of damage. But these things were EF2, EF3 tornadoes. VERY bizarre.
Storm surge and flash flooding are usually the primary problems with hurricanes. And both are getting worse because of climate change. With the water heating up and sea levels rising, these storms are carrying more rain, and since they're more intense, the storm surge is worse. And the sea level rise with climate change that's going to wipe out coastal communities one after another over the next few decades are going to happen in surge events like this.
A hurricane can go down from a Cat. 5 to a Cat. 2 in a day, but the storm surge is going to remain because it builds up for days and days.
I keep seeing posts and hearing stuff about how people are alarmed by how frequent these storms are now and how unusual this is. In reality, we were warned 30 years ago that, if substantial action isn't taken to curb carbon emissions and combat climate change, this is what would happen in 30 years. And here we are, right on schedule, and it will only get worse and worse.
Sounds like my bro-in-law near Lakeland. A few trees down on the multi-acre lot. Lost power for only a couple of hours.My neighbor just texted from Clearwater, she had one 8’ fence panel blow down. Lucky.
Yeah, Donna in 6 (I believe). The eye was the most beautiful thing I've ever seem, but it only lasted a minute or two and then we got the other side.Have you been in one before? I have more than once, it can be extremely nerve racking, be safe and God blees you and family.
Yeah, Donna in 6 (I believe). The eye was the most beautiful thing I've ever seem, but it only lasted a minute or two and then we got the other side.
Duke Energy said it would be Tuesday before they could restore out power, but we just got I back, so with a little clean up everything will be normal again.
Hope everyone else came out ok, though Sarasota got destroyed.