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Hurricane Milton
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JonBoyFree Member
This is once in a generation storm. Are we however going to see more and more like this. I read that this storm is close to the maxium that our atmosphere could create and/or support for any time.
I love winter storms when its all safe and cosy but this looks downright terrifying. I hope that all in the path are as safe as can be.
johndohFree MemberI love winter storms when its all safe and cosy but this looks downright terrifying.
Yeah, there is a whole world of difference between a nice winter storm and this – even if it does weaken as expected, it is still massive and it is hitting landfall from a different position than they normally do in that region so it is expected to cause even more damage to a greater area.
2midlifecrashesFull MemberThis is one of several once in a generation storms this year, other years could well/will be worse. All in it’s path are not as safe as can be. It is as energetic as physics will allow given its location, air pressure and gulf water temps, however if those are different, bigger is possible.
1CaherFull MemberThe Hurricane hunters from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association flight reminded me of landing at Kerry airport.
crazy-legsFull Memberhttps://x.com/FinanceLancelot/status/1843723158295052432?t=1kQSeUfu0d7d0rjq5XLCEg&s=19
Embedded video with special effects of the expected storm surges.
pk13Full MemberWhole flocks of birds just caught in the eye apparently so big you can see the flocks on weather radar.
3mashrFull MemberCaherFull Member
The Hurricane hunters from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association flight reminded me of landing at Kerry airport.Really impressed by how much crap is lying around the cabin. You’d figured they’d have everything squared away as bumpy weather is hardly unexpected
ratherbeintobagoFull MemberThis is once in a generation storm
From what I’ve read this is getting close to the theoretical maximum wind speed which is alarming, and I hope everyone in Florida gets out safely.
There was a suggestion that Milton/Helene might affect the US election as a lot of the electoral infrastructure will be trashed in affected states.
1willardFull MemberA friend of mine messaged me to say he’s expecting the eye to go directly over his house. He’s a bit fatalistic about it, but he’s looking at the brghtside and hoping that it brings down the crappy fence his neighbour has so he will fit a new one.
He also mentioed that there’s a new conspiracy theory going around about how it suddenly decided to turn and go the way it did. Apparently there was a P3 Orion track at the point it turned at the time it turned and the local nut-jobs have seized on this and a Castro-era weather control conspiracy to put two and two together to make 7.
1thepuristFull Membermight affect the US election as a lot of the electoral infrastructure will be trashed in affected states.
So not because one of the candidates is in the pocket of the oil companies and is a massive climate sceptic, so electing him will do nothing to help with the issue that’s behind the more frequent and bigger storms?
doris5000Free MemberHe also mentioed that there’s a new conspiracy theory going around about how it suddenly decided to turn and go the way it did
I wonder if the people spreading this theory also claim that ‘human activity cannot change the climate’….
onewheelgoodFull MemberI wonder if the people spreading this theory also claim that ‘human activity cannot change the climate’….
There seems to be an almost 100% overlap ?
MacgyverFull MemberI know someone whose house was Destroyed in Hurricane Dorian. They were drying the house out after Helene and now have evacuated to Georgia (they live in St Petersburg) If I were them I’d be thinking the bloody things were targeting me!
4DickBartonFull MemberFrom the safety of the UK, it is impressive to see, but for those caught in it, it is going to be absolutely awful.
I can’t help but think human activities are helping these things grow and get worse, but I also can’t help thinking that despite us knowing this, we aren’t going to change our ways…
I do hope something drastic changes and it reduces very quickly.2somafunkFull MemberFrom what I’ve read this is getting close to the theoretical maximum wind speed which is alarming, and I hope everyone in Florida gets out safely.
Not everyone though, on Fridays news I want to see a bloated trump floating in the debris with a “vote trump” yard sign thrown through his forehead.
1crazy-legsFull MemberThere seems to be an almost 100% overlap ?
Oh all the genuine storm warning tweets are answered / quote tweeted by a raft of climate conspiracy nonsense. On a related note, there’s an Instagram feed that shows ultra-long-distance flight paths as a video and diagram of where the aircraft is, why it’s flying over the north pole etc and the comments section to that is basically all just Flat Earthers denouncing it as fake.
There was some Florida governor / government person caught on video announcing that he wouldn’t be leaving for a bunch of made up global warming conspiracy stuff.
HoratioHufnagelFree MemberThe conspiracy theories on twitter are crazy. Do people really think this has been created by HAARP to wipe out trump voters to protect the billionaire democrats who went to Epsteins island? Or am I the one believing the conspiracy theory for thinking that the conspiracy theories are true??
1kormoranFree MemberThe surges are incredible, can’t get my head around how much water there must be coming in
And where do you go when you leave your home? It’s pretty horrible stuff
james-rennieFull MemberMy cousin lives in Tampa , in a place called Tarpon Springs, he really wants to get out but says there’s no available hotel rooms, shelters or other accomodation for hundreds of miles because everything is still full with people displaced by the last storm. Apparently many people have decided to just drive away without firm plans only to find traffic at a standstill and fuel sold out.
Sounds miserable and scary.
fossyFull MemberThis above – it’s no good officials saying if you stay, the house is your coffin, when you can’t actually get out due to the traffic and no-where to stay.
LATFull MemberThis is once in a generation storm.
while I appreciate that this is a very big storm and not wanting to belittle the impact it will have, when I lived in Houston in Texas the place would flood every winter and every winter the floods would be described as the worst floods in the last 100 years. That did make me wonder how bad the floods were 100 years ago.
1CougarFull MemberI can’t help but think human activities are helping these things grow and get worse, but I also can’t help thinking that despite us knowing this, we aren’t going to change our ways…
Yup. The elephant in the room though is that climate change is happening anyway. It’s not enough for us to stop making it worse, we need to be actively trying to mitigate it.
The conspiracy theories on twitter are crazy.
I believe that what we have here is a tautology.
2FunkyDuncFree MemberEvery so often I take a look at this live cam thing. Its already a bit breezy and wet. The ground is still water logged from the last Hurricane
It would appear that alot of folk are not running away just yet though and keen to get in on the live cam feed (top right cam)
1richmtbFull MemberMy cousin lives in Tampa , in a place called Tarpon Springs, he really wants to get out but says there’s no available hotel rooms, shelters or other accomodation for hundreds of miles because everything is still full with people displaced by the last storm. Apparently many people have decided to just drive away without firm plans only to find traffic at a standstill and fuel sold out.
The sounds horrible, I hope things turn out okay. Apparently there are 6 million people inside the mandatory evacuation zone. Getting that many people anywhere is a huge undertaking and that’s before you consider all the people still displaced from the last storm.
4willardFull MemberThis is not helped by people like Eric Schmidt and Bill Gates saying that, despite AI datacenter usage being a big source of greenhouse emissions (and only increasing), the planet should keep going on building new ones because AI is advancing so rapidly that it will be able to solve the problem it has caused.
Errr, WTF?
1thols2Full MemberThe conspiracy theories on twitter are crazy.
I believe that what we have here is a tautology.
Three tautologies by my count.
1doris5000Free Memberthe planet should keep going on building new ones because AI is advancing so rapidly that it will be able to solve the problem it has caused.
This line is consistently trotted out by the people who will benefit (to the tune of billions) if AI is a success. They need to push this because, so far, AI companies are losing money at an astonishing rate, and they need to turn the ship around in a hurry.
scuttlerFull MemberPanning cam here (easier in the eyes than the four box thing up there)
salad_dodgerFree MemberI was living in Grand Cayman in 2004 when we got hit hard by Hurricane Ivan. Never been so scared in my life and it was the storm surge more than the 150mph winds that terrified us all as. The islands highest point is a shade over 50ft so 20ft storm surge wiped a lot of homes and businesses away completely.
mrlebowskiFree Memberto put two and two together to make 7.
7? I’m not sure they can count that high…
3ElShalimoFull Member7? I’m not sure they can count that high…
Surely the more advanced ones can count to 7 on one hand?
2kelvinFull MemberThat did make me wonder how bad the floods were 100 years ago.
We are redefining “once in a 100 years” events nearly every year, all over the world. That’s the nature of climate change.
1pondoFull MemberJust heard about “Lieutenant Dan”, who plans on riding it out at sea on a 20ft boat.
Pity the poor sods who have to go looking for him…
CougarFull MemberWe are redefining “once in a 100 years” events nearly every year, all over the world. That’s the nature of climate change.
We’re also redefining “once in a 100 years” every year, all over the world, because that’s how time works. (-:
1ossifyFull MemberWe are redefining “once in a 100 years” events nearly every year, all over the world. That’s the nature of climate change.
The good news is that we’ll be safe for the next 100 years, so there’s that.
pk13Full MemberYou know when your in the lakes up high and you go round a corner and get hit by a 40 mph gust and you poop yourself.
There is no way that I would still be there storm shelter or not. I’ve seen a photo of someone ratchet strapping there house to ground.
1airventFree MemberIt doesn’t help that their houses are made of sticks and on fault low lying flat ground.
It reminds me of Katrina all those years ago, the richest nation on earth somehow completely incompetent at dealing with natural disaster mitigation and relief.
Huge areas of the residential areas flooded during Katrina are still today the way they were the day after it hit.
1MadBillMcMadFull MemberWatching that first webcam with people taking selfies in front of massive waves, the Darwin awards entry list may be getting larger
3gwaelodFree MemberThe “once in a hundred” years / “once in a generation*” terminology is really confusing. People think it’s a measure of frequency of an event, but it really isn’t – it’s a measure of size of an event. A 1:100 year event is simply an event that is so large there is only a 1 percent chance of it happening in any year. That absolutely doesn’t mean it will only happen once in a hundred years, or if it happens today it must have happened a 100 years ago indeed there is no reason why it can’t happen multiple times in a few years or even multiple times in the same year….especially if the underlying causes behind the event are rapidly changing, as the original percentages would have more often than not been derived using calculations that involved assumptions of regular distribution and randomness in a climate we no longer live in.
I hate the use of term……
( * generation is generally taken as 30years)
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