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#hurricaneidalia — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #hurricaneidalia, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The top 10 most impactful #weather events of 2023

    From powerful #hurricanes and #tornadoes to drought-busting storms and the deadliest #wildfire in the US in a century, here is a look back at the most unforgettable weather events of 2023.

    By Monica Danielle, AccuWeather senior producer

    Published Dec 26, 2023

    1. Record-breaking January tornado outbreak

    In a month typically clocking inches of snow, there were a whopping 168 tornadoes reported over two outbreaks, more than triple the historical average for January, setting a new record for the month.

    An outbreak on January 12 produced 70 tornado reports across seven states. This date included two EF3 tornadoes that resulted in at least 9 deaths and 34 injuries across #Alabama and #Georgia. An EF2 tornado also caused devastation in the historic city of #SelmaAlabama, about 40 miles west of Montgomery.

    2. Violent EF4 tornado rips through #Mississippi, killing 17

    On March 24, two dozen twisters touched down across the Southeast, including the deadliest and one of the year’s most violent tornadoes. The EF4 tornado ripped through #Rolling ForkMississippi, and claimed the lives of 17 people, including a couple killed by a large semi-truck that was tossed into their home.

    3. The most notable tornado outbreak of the year

    The most notable tornado outbreak of 2023 was the deadly and now historic outbreak that impacted large portions of the Midwest, South, and East U.S. on March 31 and April 1. The year's second and final EF4 tornado was one of 122 twisters reported across multiple states. AccuWeather's own storm tracker and meteorologist, Tony Laubach, captured incredible footage of one of the strongest tornadoes of the year when he intercepted the twister in southeast #Iowa near the city of #Ottumwa.

    4. Drought-busting #AtmosphericRivers unload record-breaking #snow

    Coming into 2023, drought was a major concern for #California and other parts of the West. "This is a #megadrought," California Governor Gavin Newsom said. "Some scientists argue it's the most significant in 1200 years of human history." But it wouldn't be long until the #drought was wiped out completely.

    5. Smoke from #Canada's worst-ever wildfire season blankets US cities

    Canada experienced its worst wildfire season on record, obliterating all other years in terms of area burned. Over the course of the fire season, flames scorched an estimated 18.4 million hectares—an area roughly the size of North Dakota. According to NASA, on average, just 2.5 million hectares burn in Canada each year.

    6. Deadliest US wildfire in more than a century sweeps through #Maui, #Hawaii

    The wildfire that ignited in Maui on August 8 was the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, killing at least 106 people and all but incinerating #Lahaina, destroying every building in the town of 13,000.

    7. #HurricaneIdalia slams #Florida's Nature Coast

    The above-normal 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was characterized by record-warm #AtlanticSeaSurfaceTemperatures and a strong #ElNiño. A total of 20 storms were named in 2023, along with a tropical depression and an unnamed subtropical storm. This ranks fourth for the most-named storms in a year since 1950 and the most on record during an El Niño-influenced season. Seven storms were hurricanes, three intensifying to major #hurricanes.

    8. #HurricaneLee stirs up rough surf, and dangerous rip currents along East Coast

    Before making landfall in far western #NovaScotia, Hurricane Lee caused dangerous surf and rip currents along the Atlantic Coast of the United States. Lee claimed two victims, a 51-year-old man who was killed by a falling tree branch in #Maine and a teenager who drowned off the coast of Florida amid rough seas churned up by the hurricane. The monstrous storm cut power to more than 280,000 electric customers across Maine, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as it roared ashore.

    9. The hottest year in recorded history

    Six record-breaking months and two seasons – summer and autumn – were recorded in 2023, making it the hottest year ever recorded.

    10. El Niño nears historic strength

    The global weather phenomenon El Niño, in which surface waters are abnormally warm in the eastern tropical Pacific, was a major player in many of the top weather events in 2023. The major shift to El Niño following three years of La Niña, could evolve into one of the strongest El Niño events observed over the past 75 years, new data shows.

    accuweather.com/en/weather-new

    #ClimateCrisis #ClimateCatastrophe #USWx #USWeather #Weather2023 #WeatherExtremes #ExtremeHeat

  2. The top 10 most impactful #weather events of 2023

    From powerful #hurricanes and #tornadoes to drought-busting storms and the deadliest #wildfire in the US in a century, here is a look back at the most unforgettable weather events of 2023.

    By Monica Danielle, AccuWeather senior producer

    Published Dec 26, 2023

    1. Record-breaking January tornado outbreak

    In a month typically clocking inches of snow, there were a whopping 168 tornadoes reported over two outbreaks, more than triple the historical average for January, setting a new record for the month.

    An outbreak on January 12 produced 70 tornado reports across seven states. This date included two EF3 tornadoes that resulted in at least 9 deaths and 34 injuries across #Alabama and #Georgia. An EF2 tornado also caused devastation in the historic city of #SelmaAlabama, about 40 miles west of Montgomery.

    2. Violent EF4 tornado rips through #Mississippi, killing 17

    On March 24, two dozen twisters touched down across the Southeast, including the deadliest and one of the year’s most violent tornadoes. The EF4 tornado ripped through #Rolling ForkMississippi, and claimed the lives of 17 people, including a couple killed by a large semi-truck that was tossed into their home.

    3. The most notable tornado outbreak of the year

    The most notable tornado outbreak of 2023 was the deadly and now historic outbreak that impacted large portions of the Midwest, South, and East U.S. on March 31 and April 1. The year's second and final EF4 tornado was one of 122 twisters reported across multiple states. AccuWeather's own storm tracker and meteorologist, Tony Laubach, captured incredible footage of one of the strongest tornadoes of the year when he intercepted the twister in southeast #Iowa near the city of #Ottumwa.

    4. Drought-busting #AtmosphericRivers unload record-breaking #snow

    Coming into 2023, drought was a major concern for #California and other parts of the West. "This is a #megadrought," California Governor Gavin Newsom said. "Some scientists argue it's the most significant in 1200 years of human history." But it wouldn't be long until the #drought was wiped out completely.

    5. Smoke from #Canada's worst-ever wildfire season blankets US cities

    Canada experienced its worst wildfire season on record, obliterating all other years in terms of area burned. Over the course of the fire season, flames scorched an estimated 18.4 million hectares—an area roughly the size of North Dakota. According to NASA, on average, just 2.5 million hectares burn in Canada each year.

    6. Deadliest US wildfire in more than a century sweeps through #Maui, #Hawaii

    The wildfire that ignited in Maui on August 8 was the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, killing at least 106 people and all but incinerating #Lahaina, destroying every building in the town of 13,000.

    7. #HurricaneIdalia slams #Florida's Nature Coast

    The above-normal 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was characterized by record-warm #AtlanticSeaSurfaceTemperatures and a strong #ElNiño. A total of 20 storms were named in 2023, along with a tropical depression and an unnamed subtropical storm. This ranks fourth for the most-named storms in a year since 1950 and the most on record during an El Niño-influenced season. Seven storms were hurricanes, three intensifying to major #hurricanes.

    8. #HurricaneLee stirs up rough surf, and dangerous rip currents along East Coast

    Before making landfall in far western #NovaScotia, Hurricane Lee caused dangerous surf and rip currents along the Atlantic Coast of the United States. Lee claimed two victims, a 51-year-old man who was killed by a falling tree branch in #Maine and a teenager who drowned off the coast of Florida amid rough seas churned up by the hurricane. The monstrous storm cut power to more than 280,000 electric customers across Maine, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as it roared ashore.

    9. The hottest year in recorded history

    Six record-breaking months and two seasons – summer and autumn – were recorded in 2023, making it the hottest year ever recorded.

    10. El Niño nears historic strength

    The global weather phenomenon El Niño, in which surface waters are abnormally warm in the eastern tropical Pacific, was a major player in many of the top weather events in 2023. The major shift to El Niño following three years of La Niña, could evolve into one of the strongest El Niño events observed over the past 75 years, new data shows.

    accuweather.com/en/weather-new

    #ClimateCrisis #ClimateCatastrophe #USWx #USWeather #Weather2023 #WeatherExtremes #ExtremeHeat

  3. The top 10 most impactful #weather events of 2023

    From powerful #hurricanes and #tornadoes to drought-busting storms and the deadliest #wildfire in the US in a century, here is a look back at the most unforgettable weather events of 2023.

    By Monica Danielle, AccuWeather senior producer

    Published Dec 26, 2023

    1. Record-breaking January tornado outbreak

    In a month typically clocking inches of snow, there were a whopping 168 tornadoes reported over two outbreaks, more than triple the historical average for January, setting a new record for the month.

    An outbreak on January 12 produced 70 tornado reports across seven states. This date included two EF3 tornadoes that resulted in at least 9 deaths and 34 injuries across #Alabama and #Georgia. An EF2 tornado also caused devastation in the historic city of #SelmaAlabama, about 40 miles west of Montgomery.

    2. Violent EF4 tornado rips through #Mississippi, killing 17

    On March 24, two dozen twisters touched down across the Southeast, including the deadliest and one of the year’s most violent tornadoes. The EF4 tornado ripped through #Rolling ForkMississippi, and claimed the lives of 17 people, including a couple killed by a large semi-truck that was tossed into their home.

    3. The most notable tornado outbreak of the year

    The most notable tornado outbreak of 2023 was the deadly and now historic outbreak that impacted large portions of the Midwest, South, and East U.S. on March 31 and April 1. The year's second and final EF4 tornado was one of 122 twisters reported across multiple states. AccuWeather's own storm tracker and meteorologist, Tony Laubach, captured incredible footage of one of the strongest tornadoes of the year when he intercepted the twister in southeast #Iowa near the city of #Ottumwa.

    4. Drought-busting #AtmosphericRivers unload record-breaking #snow

    Coming into 2023, drought was a major concern for #California and other parts of the West. "This is a #megadrought," California Governor Gavin Newsom said. "Some scientists argue it's the most significant in 1200 years of human history." But it wouldn't be long until the #drought was wiped out completely.

    5. Smoke from #Canada's worst-ever wildfire season blankets US cities

    Canada experienced its worst wildfire season on record, obliterating all other years in terms of area burned. Over the course of the fire season, flames scorched an estimated 18.4 million hectares—an area roughly the size of North Dakota. According to NASA, on average, just 2.5 million hectares burn in Canada each year.

    6. Deadliest US wildfire in more than a century sweeps through #Maui, #Hawaii

    The wildfire that ignited in Maui on August 8 was the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, killing at least 106 people and all but incinerating #Lahaina, destroying every building in the town of 13,000.

    7. #HurricaneIdalia slams #Florida's Nature Coast

    The above-normal 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was characterized by record-warm #AtlanticSeaSurfaceTemperatures and a strong #ElNiño. A total of 20 storms were named in 2023, along with a tropical depression and an unnamed subtropical storm. This ranks fourth for the most-named storms in a year since 1950 and the most on record during an El Niño-influenced season. Seven storms were hurricanes, three intensifying to major #hurricanes.

    8. #HurricaneLee stirs up rough surf, and dangerous rip currents along East Coast

    Before making landfall in far western #NovaScotia, Hurricane Lee caused dangerous surf and rip currents along the Atlantic Coast of the United States. Lee claimed two victims, a 51-year-old man who was killed by a falling tree branch in #Maine and a teenager who drowned off the coast of Florida amid rough seas churned up by the hurricane. The monstrous storm cut power to more than 280,000 electric customers across Maine, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as it roared ashore.

    9. The hottest year in recorded history

    Six record-breaking months and two seasons – summer and autumn – were recorded in 2023, making it the hottest year ever recorded.

    10. El Niño nears historic strength

    The global weather phenomenon El Niño, in which surface waters are abnormally warm in the eastern tropical Pacific, was a major player in many of the top weather events in 2023. The major shift to El Niño following three years of La Niña, could evolve into one of the strongest El Niño events observed over the past 75 years, new data shows.

    accuweather.com/en/weather-new

    #ClimateCrisis #ClimateCatastrophe #USWx #USWeather #Weather2023 #WeatherExtremes #ExtremeHeat

  4. The top 10 most impactful #weather events of 2023

    From powerful #hurricanes and #tornadoes to drought-busting storms and the deadliest #wildfire in the US in a century, here is a look back at the most unforgettable weather events of 2023.

    By Monica Danielle, AccuWeather senior producer

    Published Dec 26, 2023

    1. Record-breaking January tornado outbreak

    In a month typically clocking inches of snow, there were a whopping 168 tornadoes reported over two outbreaks, more than triple the historical average for January, setting a new record for the month.

    An outbreak on January 12 produced 70 tornado reports across seven states. This date included two EF3 tornadoes that resulted in at least 9 deaths and 34 injuries across #Alabama and #Georgia. An EF2 tornado also caused devastation in the historic city of #SelmaAlabama, about 40 miles west of Montgomery.

    2. Violent EF4 tornado rips through #Mississippi, killing 17

    On March 24, two dozen twisters touched down across the Southeast, including the deadliest and one of the year’s most violent tornadoes. The EF4 tornado ripped through #Rolling ForkMississippi, and claimed the lives of 17 people, including a couple killed by a large semi-truck that was tossed into their home.

    3. The most notable tornado outbreak of the year

    The most notable tornado outbreak of 2023 was the deadly and now historic outbreak that impacted large portions of the Midwest, South, and East U.S. on March 31 and April 1. The year's second and final EF4 tornado was one of 122 twisters reported across multiple states. AccuWeather's own storm tracker and meteorologist, Tony Laubach, captured incredible footage of one of the strongest tornadoes of the year when he intercepted the twister in southeast #Iowa near the city of #Ottumwa.

    4. Drought-busting #AtmosphericRivers unload record-breaking #snow

    Coming into 2023, drought was a major concern for #California and other parts of the West. "This is a #megadrought," California Governor Gavin Newsom said. "Some scientists argue it's the most significant in 1200 years of human history." But it wouldn't be long until the #drought was wiped out completely.

    5. Smoke from #Canada's worst-ever wildfire season blankets US cities

    Canada experienced its worst wildfire season on record, obliterating all other years in terms of area burned. Over the course of the fire season, flames scorched an estimated 18.4 million hectares—an area roughly the size of North Dakota. According to NASA, on average, just 2.5 million hectares burn in Canada each year.

    6. Deadliest US wildfire in more than a century sweeps through #Maui, #Hawaii

    The wildfire that ignited in Maui on August 8 was the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, killing at least 106 people and all but incinerating #Lahaina, destroying every building in the town of 13,000.

    7. #HurricaneIdalia slams #Florida's Nature Coast

    The above-normal 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was characterized by record-warm #AtlanticSeaSurfaceTemperatures and a strong #ElNiño. A total of 20 storms were named in 2023, along with a tropical depression and an unnamed subtropical storm. This ranks fourth for the most-named storms in a year since 1950 and the most on record during an El Niño-influenced season. Seven storms were hurricanes, three intensifying to major #hurricanes.

    8. #HurricaneLee stirs up rough surf, and dangerous rip currents along East Coast

    Before making landfall in far western #NovaScotia, Hurricane Lee caused dangerous surf and rip currents along the Atlantic Coast of the United States. Lee claimed two victims, a 51-year-old man who was killed by a falling tree branch in #Maine and a teenager who drowned off the coast of Florida amid rough seas churned up by the hurricane. The monstrous storm cut power to more than 280,000 electric customers across Maine, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as it roared ashore.

    9. The hottest year in recorded history

    Six record-breaking months and two seasons – summer and autumn – were recorded in 2023, making it the hottest year ever recorded.

    10. El Niño nears historic strength

    The global weather phenomenon El Niño, in which surface waters are abnormally warm in the eastern tropical Pacific, was a major player in many of the top weather events in 2023. The major shift to El Niño following three years of La Niña, could evolve into one of the strongest El Niño events observed over the past 75 years, new data shows.

    accuweather.com/en/weather-new

    #ClimateCrisis #ClimateCatastrophe #USWx #USWeather #Weather2023 #WeatherExtremes #ExtremeHeat

  5. The top 10 most impactful #weather events of 2023

    From powerful #hurricanes and #tornadoes to drought-busting storms and the deadliest #wildfire in the US in a century, here is a look back at the most unforgettable weather events of 2023.

    By Monica Danielle, AccuWeather senior producer

    Published Dec 26, 2023

    1. Record-breaking January tornado outbreak

    In a month typically clocking inches of snow, there were a whopping 168 tornadoes reported over two outbreaks, more than triple the historical average for January, setting a new record for the month.

    An outbreak on January 12 produced 70 tornado reports across seven states. This date included two EF3 tornadoes that resulted in at least 9 deaths and 34 injuries across #Alabama and #Georgia. An EF2 tornado also caused devastation in the historic city of #SelmaAlabama, about 40 miles west of Montgomery.

    2. Violent EF4 tornado rips through #Mississippi, killing 17

    On March 24, two dozen twisters touched down across the Southeast, including the deadliest and one of the year’s most violent tornadoes. The EF4 tornado ripped through #Rolling ForkMississippi, and claimed the lives of 17 people, including a couple killed by a large semi-truck that was tossed into their home.

    3. The most notable tornado outbreak of the year

    The most notable tornado outbreak of 2023 was the deadly and now historic outbreak that impacted large portions of the Midwest, South, and East U.S. on March 31 and April 1. The year's second and final EF4 tornado was one of 122 twisters reported across multiple states. AccuWeather's own storm tracker and meteorologist, Tony Laubach, captured incredible footage of one of the strongest tornadoes of the year when he intercepted the twister in southeast #Iowa near the city of #Ottumwa.

    4. Drought-busting #AtmosphericRivers unload record-breaking #snow

    Coming into 2023, drought was a major concern for #California and other parts of the West. "This is a #megadrought," California Governor Gavin Newsom said. "Some scientists argue it's the most significant in 1200 years of human history." But it wouldn't be long until the #drought was wiped out completely.

    5. Smoke from #Canada's worst-ever wildfire season blankets US cities

    Canada experienced its worst wildfire season on record, obliterating all other years in terms of area burned. Over the course of the fire season, flames scorched an estimated 18.4 million hectares—an area roughly the size of North Dakota. According to NASA, on average, just 2.5 million hectares burn in Canada each year.

    6. Deadliest US wildfire in more than a century sweeps through #Maui, #Hawaii

    The wildfire that ignited in Maui on August 8 was the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, killing at least 106 people and all but incinerating #Lahaina, destroying every building in the town of 13,000.

    7. #HurricaneIdalia slams #Florida's Nature Coast

    The above-normal 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was characterized by record-warm #AtlanticSeaSurfaceTemperatures and a strong #ElNiño. A total of 20 storms were named in 2023, along with a tropical depression and an unnamed subtropical storm. This ranks fourth for the most-named storms in a year since 1950 and the most on record during an El Niño-influenced season. Seven storms were hurricanes, three intensifying to major #hurricanes.

    8. #HurricaneLee stirs up rough surf, and dangerous rip currents along East Coast

    Before making landfall in far western #NovaScotia, Hurricane Lee caused dangerous surf and rip currents along the Atlantic Coast of the United States. Lee claimed two victims, a 51-year-old man who was killed by a falling tree branch in #Maine and a teenager who drowned off the coast of Florida amid rough seas churned up by the hurricane. The monstrous storm cut power to more than 280,000 electric customers across Maine, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick as it roared ashore.

    9. The hottest year in recorded history

    Six record-breaking months and two seasons – summer and autumn – were recorded in 2023, making it the hottest year ever recorded.

    10. El Niño nears historic strength

    The global weather phenomenon El Niño, in which surface waters are abnormally warm in the eastern tropical Pacific, was a major player in many of the top weather events in 2023. The major shift to El Niño following three years of La Niña, could evolve into one of the strongest El Niño events observed over the past 75 years, new data shows.

    accuweather.com/en/weather-new

    #ClimateCrisis #ClimateCatastrophe #USWx #USWeather #Weather2023 #WeatherExtremes #ExtremeHeat

  6. Estimated $447 million in losses for #Florida #agriculture from #HurricaneIdalia.

    "The state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said the storm, which made landfall in Taylor County at Category 3 strength before crossing other areas of rural North Florida, had its biggest impact on such things as #cattle and #poultry operations, followed by #FieldCrops."

    cbsnews.com/miami/news/florida

  7. Estimated $447 million in losses for #Florida #agriculture from #HurricaneIdalia.

    "The state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said the storm, which made landfall in Taylor County at Category 3 strength before crossing other areas of rural North Florida, had its biggest impact on such things as #cattle and #poultry operations, followed by #FieldCrops."

    cbsnews.com/miami/news/florida

  8. Estimated $447 million in losses for #Florida #agriculture from #HurricaneIdalia.

    "The state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said the storm, which made landfall in Taylor County at Category 3 strength before crossing other areas of rural North Florida, had its biggest impact on such things as #cattle and #poultry operations, followed by #FieldCrops."

    cbsnews.com/miami/news/florida

  9. Estimated $447 million in losses for #Florida #agriculture from #HurricaneIdalia.

    "The state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said the storm, which made landfall in Taylor County at Category 3 strength before crossing other areas of rural North Florida, had its biggest impact on such things as #cattle and #poultry operations, followed by #FieldCrops."

    cbsnews.com/miami/news/florida

  10. Estimated $447 million in losses for #Florida #agriculture from #HurricaneIdalia.

    "The state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said the storm, which made landfall in Taylor County at Category 3 strength before crossing other areas of rural North Florida, had its biggest impact on such things as #cattle and #poultry operations, followed by #FieldCrops."

    cbsnews.com/miami/news/florida

  11. How sharks avoid the wrath of an extreme hurricane.

    Vox reports: "These marine predators have a few clever tricks to survive storms like Idalia."

    flip.it/KgJ7W7

    #Shark #Hurricane #HurricaneIdalia #Idalia #Ocean

  12. #Journal, Day 1259
    Wednesday, 30 August 2023
    (Day 121 of #WGAstrike)
    (Day 48 of #SAGAFTRAstrike)

    #Mauifire death toll at this hour: Still at 115, only 54 have been identified.
    Still officially missing: Currently unknown.

    #hurricaneidalia #hvacfail
    #sweaty #portableac

  13. “Everything’s on the table” - Key Biscayne rethinking $310 million sea level rise plan :

    The uneasiness over the cost of protecting the island from rising seas came even as Hurricane Idalia was pummeling the Gulf Coast with torrential rainfall and storm surge.
    #AECOM #barrierisland #drainage #EdLondon #FernandoVazquez #FrankCaplan #hurricaneidalia #JoeRasco #resiliencybon

    kbindependent.org/2023/08/30/e

  14. Here’s how I avoid buying plastic bottles of water when a hurricane gets close. Don’t buy bottled water before a hurricane. #hurricane #hurricaneidalia #hurricaneprep
    youtube.com/shorts/c7b0Qoq7QIU

  15. Here’s how I avoid buying plastic bottles of water when a hurricane gets close. Don’t buy bottled water before a hurricane. #hurricane #hurricaneidalia #hurricaneprep
    youtube.com/shorts/c7b0Qoq7QIU

  16. Here’s how I avoid buying plastic bottles of water when a hurricane gets close. Don’t buy bottled water before a hurricane. #hurricane #hurricaneidalia #hurricaneprep
    youtube.com/shorts/c7b0Qoq7QIU

  17. Here’s how I avoid buying plastic bottles of water when a hurricane gets close. Don’t buy bottled water before a hurricane. #hurricane #hurricaneidalia #hurricaneprep
    youtube.com/shorts/c7b0Qoq7QIU

  18. For myself, just some minor flooding and a lot of noise from #HurricaneIdalia. How are my other #Floridian #Fediverse citizens? Boost so we can get a good data set.

  19. Breathing a personal sigh of relief. (Our boat was smashed by last year.)

    Hoping folks in the path are prepared.

    Also hoping state-level idiots don’t impede disaster relief from FEMA. (It’s a Death-Santis Dick Move that the fascist press would applaud with careful both-sidesing to balance actual suffering against political ideological idiocy.)

  20. I know Orlando is quite a ways away from #hurricaneidalia, but I'm only 20m away from Orlando (east) & it's just SCREAMING wind and rain here. I know it's only 20-35mph winds/rain, but shouldn't #WaltDisneyWorld close more than their WATER PARKS today? 😳

    This means #CastMembers are stuck outside in this working!

    I know people have paid for vacations, but really! They didn't expect a #Hurricane less than 100 miles away, right? Or did they? This WAS forecast to hit #Florida!

    cc: @ParkscopeJoe

  21. I’ve continued to update evacuation information for #Category4 #HurricaneIdalia in a format that can be easily read on a phone or laptop, UNLIKE the official FL site.

    #Idalia
    #Florida

    themoderatevoice.com/florida-e

  22. I’ve continued to update evacuation information for #Category4 #HurricaneIdalia in a format that can be easily read on a phone or laptop, UNLIKE the official FL site.

    #Idalia
    #Florida

    themoderatevoice.com/florida-e

  23. I’ve continued to update evacuation information for #Category4 #HurricaneIdalia in a format that can be easily read on a phone or laptop, UNLIKE the official FL site.

    #Idalia
    #Florida

    themoderatevoice.com/florida-e

  24. I’ve continued to update evacuation information for #Category4 #HurricaneIdalia in a format that can be easily read on a phone or laptop, UNLIKE the official FL site.

    #Idalia
    #Florida

    themoderatevoice.com/florida-e

  25. I’ve continued to update evacuation information for #Category4 #HurricaneIdalia in a format that can be easily read on a phone or laptop, UNLIKE the official FL site.

    #Idalia
    #Florida

    themoderatevoice.com/florida-e

  26. #Idalia is now a #Cat3 #Hurricane with max sustained wind of 120 mph / 195 kmh ... and still increasing!!!
    It's expected that Idalia made landfall as a #Category4 #Storm in #Florida's #BigBend region.

    Stay safe ...

    #hurricaneidalia #Perry #TaylorCounty

  27. #Idalia is now a #Cat3 #Hurricane with max sustained wind of 120 mph / 195 kmh ... and still increasing!!!
    It's expected that Idalia made landfall as a #Category4 #Storm in #Florida's #BigBend region.

    Stay safe ...

    #hurricaneidalia #Perry #TaylorCounty

  28. #Idalia is now a #Cat3 #Hurricane with max sustained wind of 120 mph / 195 kmh ... and still increasing!!!
    It's expected that Idalia made landfall as a #Category4 #Storm in #Florida's #BigBend region.

    Stay safe ...

    #hurricaneidalia #Perry #TaylorCounty

  29. CW: Hurricane Idalia, Amateur Radio

    The Hurricane Watch Net is now active for Hurricane Idalia, and they're taking damage reports from amateur radio stations in the affected area. The frequencies are 14.325 MHz and 7.268 MHz. More details here:

    hwn.org/

    #AmateurRadio #HurricaneIdalia #HurricaneWatchNet

  30. #Journal, Day 1258
    Tuesday, 29 August 2023
    (Day 120 of #WGAstrike)
    (Day 47 of #SAGAFTRAstrike)

    #Mauifire death toll at this hour: Still at 115. Still officially missing: 388 - no new updates.

    #slowmotion #hurricaneidalia
    #tornadoes #directhit
    #longnight

  31. #Journal, Day 1258
    Tuesday, 29 August 2023
    (Day 120 of #WGAstrike)
    (Day 47 of #SAGAFTRAstrike)

    #Mauifire death toll at this hour: Still at 115. Still officially missing: 388 - no new updates.

    #slowmotion #hurricaneidalia
    #tornadoes #directhit
    #longnight

  32. #Journal, Day 1258
    Tuesday, 29 August 2023
    (Day 120 of #WGAstrike)
    (Day 47 of #SAGAFTRAstrike)

    #Mauifire death toll at this hour: Still at 115. Still officially missing: 388 - no new updates.

    #slowmotion #hurricaneidalia
    #tornadoes #directhit
    #longnight

  33. #Journal, Day 1258
    Tuesday, 29 August 2023
    (Day 120 of #WGAstrike)
    (Day 47 of #SAGAFTRAstrike)

    #Mauifire death toll at this hour: Still at 115. Still officially missing: 388 - no new updates.

    #slowmotion #hurricaneidalia
    #tornadoes #directhit
    #longnight

  34. #Journal, Day 1258
    Tuesday, 29 August 2023
    (Day 120 of #WGAstrike)
    (Day 47 of #SAGAFTRAstrike)

    #Mauifire death toll at this hour: Still at 115. Still officially missing: 388 - no new updates.

    #slowmotion #hurricaneidalia
    #tornadoes #directhit
    #longnight