ReportWire

Tag: Hurricane

  • Humberto could mingle with another developing storm in what’s called the Fujiwhara effect

    [ad_1]

    Tropical Storm Humberto, the eighth named storm to emerge this hurricane season, is currently swirling over waters just north of the Caribbean. Although forecasts as of Thursday predict that Humberto won’t ever touch land, there is a possibility it could interact with another system developing nearby in the western Atlantic. 

    That’s an unlikely outcome, said CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan. But if such a collision does occur, it could produce what’s called the Fujiwhara effect, a rare phenomenon in which two different storms merge and become entangled around a newly formed, common center. 

    How the process plays out depends on the characteristics of the storms involved, according to the National Weather Service. The forecasting agency describes the Fujiwhara effect on its website as “an intense dance” between two tropical storms that can happen when they get close enough to each other on their respective tracks to reach a common point and either join together or spin around each other for a period of time before continuing along their individual paths. 

    Tropical Storm Humberto could potentially interact with another storm developing in the western Atlantic Ocean, in a phenomenon known as the Fujiwhara effect.

    Nikki Nolan/CBS News


    In the latter scenario, the storms involved must be comparably strong or large.

    “Typically when one system is stronger than the other, the smaller and weaker system will get overrun by the larger, stronger one and completely eliminates it,” Nolan said. 

    Similar systems “will dance around each other” before going their separate ways, she continued, adding: “Very rarely has a larger system absorbed a smaller one and become larger or stronger, but it is scientifically possible.”

    Humberto grew into a tropical storm Wednesday night while traveling over open waters in the central tropical Atlantic. Forecasters expect it to move northwest over the next few days and strengthen along the way, the National Hurricane Center said in an advisory. It’s one of two systems in the region that could potentially impact parts of the southeastern United States, including coastal areas from Florida to North Carolina, according to Michael Brennan, director of the hurricane center.

    Officials at the center said Wednesday that they were monitoring a second storm churning near Humberto over the northeastern Caribbean, which would likely become a tropical depression later in the week and a tropical storm, named Imelda, over the weekend. That system is expected to strengthen as it tracks toward the Bahamas — driving up the chances of storm surge, wind and rainfall striking coastal parts of the southeastern U.S.

    “With the two tropical troubles currently north of the Caribbean, these two may interact under the Fujiwhara effect in the days ahead,” said Nolan. However, because the developing system “appears to be much weaker than Humberto and several miles away from it,” an interaction between the two — if one even takes place at all — may not result in a tangled gravitational “dance.” 

    In the event Humberto and the second system do collide, it’s possible the paths they’re expected to travel will change, Nolan added, but only slightly.

    The National Hurricane Center said in an advisory Thursday morning that Humberto was on its way toward becoming a hurricane within a day or so over the central Atlantic. At the time, the storm was located about 465 miles east-northeast of the northern Leeward Islands and had maximum sustained winds of 50 miles per hour.

    contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • One year after Hurricane Helene, communities are still rebuilding destroyed bridges

    [ad_1]

    More than 1,000 bridges were destroyed or damaged in parts of rural North Carolina during Hurricane Helene. Dave Malkoff went back to check on the efforts to rebuild the community lifelines one year later.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Helene and Milton: Faces of Recovery

    [ad_1]

    TAMPA, Fla. – A major hurricane had not struck the Tampa Bay area directly in more than a century. That streak ended abruptly last year with back-to-back storms, leaving behind destruction from which the region is still recovering today.

    In this special report, we’re back in the height of another hurricane season. So, we’re taking you to different communities around west Florida and over on the east coast to assess the ongoing recovery and reveal the lessons learned.

    One year ago, Hurricane Helene made landfall as a powerful Category 4 storm in the Big Bend region of our state. Even though the Tampa Bay area didn’t take a direct hit, the region still sustained major impacts.

    Storm surge would reach heights of six to eight feet in some areas, more than we have seen in decades and maybe more than some Floridians have seen in their whole lives.

    Then, just 13 days later, Hurricane Milton made landfall near Siesta Key, just five miles from Sarasota, as a Category 3 storm. It brought heavy rainfall and damaging winds to our area, further wrecking communities that were already struggling to recover from Helene. The winds even ripped the roof off Tropicana Field, damage that is still being repaired today. 

    The storm would continue to move through the state, producing an outbreak of tornadoes — the most in Florida — in a single day.


    After the storms last year, a drive down the streets of a South Pasadena neighborhood revealed countless people picking up the pieces of what was left. Now, the neighbors who are left describe it as a ghost town. A couple who lost their home right after the storm — then again, more recently — and those raw emotions are still there. 

    Connie Winkler standing in front of their pool this year and last year.


    One thing that has become more popular in beach towns is seeing more elevated homes. After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the house-lifting industry gained national visibility. It expanded more through the years after other major storms hit the United States. Locally, you used to see one or two elevated homes in an entire neighborhood, but now you will see entire communities transformed.  

    Crews from JAS Builders in the final stages of elevation for a Treasure Island home (Erica Riggins/Spectrum News)

    Crews from JAS Builders in the final stages of elevation for a Treasure Island home (Erica Riggins/Spectrum News)


    On the east coast of Florida, Earl Wischmeier’s home flooded in 2022 from both Hurricanes Ian and Nicole. He has now opted to raise his home to avoid future floodwaters and opt out of coverage to insure it. Here’s what his recovery looks like and how he feels about the process

    Earl Wischmeier's elevated home. (Spectrum News/Asher Wildman)

    Earl Wischmeier’s elevated home. (Spectrum News/Asher Wildman)


    In Manatee County, there are some homes that look almost untouched one year later. One house was completely knocked off its stilts, and another that was pushed completely off its foundation. Those houses are pretty much in the same condition as they were left after the storm. There are signs around the property warning people to stay away, as well as part of a trailer that was crushed under the home that was next to it.  

     

    Fifteen minutes up the coast, and one Anna Maria icon is looking to make a comeback. The city is in the process of restoring the city pier. The state budget allocated more than $1 million in funding to rebuild the pier. City leaders believe it will cost between $6 – $9 million to repair the entire pier, including the restaurant. The mayor of Anna Maria says they are working with FEMA and the county to seek extra funding. The city has set a goal of reopening the pier by late fall of next year.

    But, overall, the three cities that make up Anna Maria Island — Anna Maria, Holmes Beach and Bradenton Beach — have come a long way and for some residents, it’s been a full-time job. Here’s a look at how the recovery effort for the centerpiece of the city of Anna Maria rushed to get back open.


    While Hurricane Helene caused major storm surge, Hurricane Milton dropped a record amount of rain. In St. Petersburg, 18 inches of rain fell in 24 hours. Tampa also saw about one foot of rain in one day. And just like we saw with Helene, many water rescues were performed after Milton. 

    In Clearwater, first responders rescued more than 500 people from the Standard Apartments when it flooded. In some areas, the water was neck-deep. It was Pinellas County’s largest water rescue on record. A manager at the apartment complex said they’re now renting some apartments, but other units are still being repaired.  

    In Tampa, the Forest Hills neighborhood also sustained quite a bit of flood damage, even though the neighborhood is not in a flood zone or near the coast. Nearby retention ponds overflowed, and pump stations couldn’t get the water out fast enough. We spoke to a resident to see how the last 12 months of recovery have been and what the city is doing to make sure this doesn’t happen again.

    Forest Hills, Oct. 2024 (Courtesy: Rob Seal)

    Forest Hills, Oct. 2024 (Courtesy: Rob Seal)


    While Milton caused a lot of damage along Florida’s west coast, its heavy rain also caused major flooding problems to areas inland, including areas along the St. Johns River. If you were to visit the area now, you would see people still repairing flood damage, as well as bracing for what could come next.

    People living along the St. Johns River in Seminole County brace for what could come next, while still repairing flood damage from Hurricane Milton one year ago. (Philip Petersen, Spectrum News staff)

    People living along the St. Johns River in Seminole County brace for what could come next, while still repairing flood damage from Hurricane Milton one year ago. (Philip Petersen, Spectrum News staff)


    One popular beach destination in Hernando County is back open to the public. For many, Pine Island Beach Park is a beloved slice of paradise for visitors to unwind and soak in the Florida sun, but the park was forced to close after damage sustained from the hurricanes. Here, we take a look at the newly reopened park and how it is back to helping people create new, lasting memories.

    For many, like Gabriella Schianodicola, Pine Island Beach Park is a beloved slice of paradise for visitors to unwind and enjoy the Florida sun. But the park was forced to close after damage sustained from hurricanes Helene and Milton. (Spectrum News)

    For many, like Gabriella Schianodicola, Pine Island Beach Park is a beloved slice of paradise for visitors to unwind and enjoy the Florida sun. But the park was forced to close after damage sustained from hurricanes Helene and Milton. (Spectrum News)

    [ad_2]

    Spectrum News Staff

    Source link

  • Latest updates: Tracking Hurricane Gabrielle and 2 tropical waves in the Atlantic

    [ad_1]

    Hurricane Gabrielle continues to strengthen as it moves across the Atlantic Ocean on Monday, according to the National Hurricane Center. Gabrielle is anticipated to strengthen into a Category 3 storm by Tuesday. Meanwhile, the NHC is monitoring two more tropical waves in the Atlantic. Hurricane GabrielleHurricane Gabrielle is currently located southeast of Bermuda and moving north-northwest at 10 mph. Gabrielle has maximum sustained winds of 90 mph and a minimum central pressure of 978 mb.By Tuesday, Gabrielle is forecast to be a Category 3 storm. ImpactsHurricane Gabrielle isn’t expected to hit the U.S., but the swells generated by the storm will affect Bermuda for a few days. These swells are now reaching the east coast of the United States from North Carolina northward. Central tropical waveA tropical wave is producing showers and thunderstorms west-southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands, according to the NHC.Environmental conditions are not favorable for initial development over the next day or two but are expected to gradually become more favorable by the middle to latter part of this week, NHC says.A tropical depression could form as the system moves west-northwestward across the central AtlanticFormation chance through the next 48 hours: 20%Formation chance through the next 7 days: 70% East of Windward IslandsNHC is monitoring another tropical wave located east of the Lesser Antilles Islands.The development is producing a small area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms as it moves quickly westward. Environmental conditions appear only marginally conducive for further development over the next several days.By the latter part of this week, the system is expected to slow down and turn more northwestward, moving north of Hispaniola, according to the NHC.Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 10%Formation chance through the next 7 days: 40%Hurricane season 2025The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Stay with WESH 2 online and on air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.>> More: 2025 Hurricane Survival GuideThe First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.>> 2025 hurricane season | WESH long-range forecast

    Hurricane Gabrielle continues to strengthen as it moves across the Atlantic Ocean on Monday, according to the National Hurricane Center.

    Gabrielle is anticipated to strengthen into a Category 3 storm by Tuesday. Meanwhile, the NHC is monitoring two more tropical waves in the Atlantic.

    Hurricane Gabrielle

    Hurricane Gabrielle is currently located southeast of Bermuda and moving north-northwest at 10 mph.

    Gabrielle has maximum sustained winds of 90 mph and a minimum central pressure of 978 mb.

    By Tuesday, Gabrielle is forecast to be a Category 3 storm.

    Impacts

    Hurricane Gabrielle isn’t expected to hit the U.S., but the swells generated by the storm will affect Bermuda for a few days.

    These swells are now reaching the east coast of the United States from North Carolina northward.

    Central tropical wave

    A tropical wave is producing showers and thunderstorms west-southwest of the Cabo Verde Islands, according to the NHC.

    Environmental conditions are not favorable for initial development over the next day or two but are expected to gradually become more favorable by the middle to latter part of this week, NHC says.

    A tropical depression could form as the system moves west-northwestward across the central Atlantic

    Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 20%

    Formation chance through the next 7 days: 70%

    East of Windward Islands

    NHC is monitoring another tropical wave located east of the Lesser Antilles Islands.

    The development is producing a small area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms as it moves quickly westward.

    Environmental conditions appear only marginally conducive for further development over the next several days.

    By the latter part of this week, the system is expected to slow down and turn more northwestward, moving north of Hispaniola, according to the NHC.

    Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 10%

    Formation chance through the next 7 days: 40%

    Hurricane season 2025

    The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Stay with WESH 2 online and on air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.

    >> More: 2025 Hurricane Survival Guide

    The First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.

    >> 2025 hurricane season | WESH long-range forecast

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How a man used Hurricane Helene rubble to build a new home after the storm’s wrath damaged the southeastern U.S.

    [ad_1]

    Last September, Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida, becoming the deadliest hurricane to hit the mainland U.S. since Katrina in 2005. As heavy rains swept through the Appalachian Mountains, homes near Asheville, North Carolina, and beyond were demolished. 

    “Seeing it on the news is one thing, but standing there amongst it is hard to get your head around,” Leicester resident John Saunby said about the debris from Helene.

    Despite the damage, Saunby realized some parts might be worth salvaging.

    He pulled his porch posts out of the wilderness, and found his kitchen floorboards inside an old cotton mill. 

    “The woods are full of treasure,” Saunby said. 

    The items he retrieved from the woods were “headed to the landfill,” but they have helped him build his dream house. Despite a history of home construction, he’s never had the resources to fulfill his own creative vision — including Black Locust bark siding and portions of tree trunks that support his roof.

    With next week marking one year since Helene hit, Saunby is on the search for Wormy Chesnut lumber, a rare wood usually salvaged from old barns that comes from the American chestnut, a tree once plentiful in North Carolina.

    He has some help on what he calls his “last hurrah” of home-building.

    Jenny Kimmel, an Appalachian recording artist, is his partner and muse for the project. Kimmel strums her guitar and serenades while Saunby builds.

    “This house has, like, the soul of the world in it, you know, it’s nice to be with somebody who sees that,” she says, tearing up.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Building a home with hurricane rubble

    [ad_1]



    Watch CBS News



    After Hurricane Helene slammed the Southeast U.S. in 2024, homes in Western North Carolina were damaged beyond repair. But one resident saw the value of the old wooden debris and decided to build something new from the rubble.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Tropical Storm Gabrielle forecast to strengthen into hurricane this weekend, NHC says

    [ad_1]

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle forecast to strengthen into hurricane this weekend, NHC says

    THE WEEKEND IS FINALLY HERE. IT’S NOT 100 DEGREES OUTSIDE AND PEOPLE CAN ACTUALLY HAVE SOME AND IT’S DRY. MARQUISE I THINK YOU’RE SERVING UP A NICE ONE TODAY. I LOVE THE OPTIMISM RADIATING OFF YOU GUYS RIGHT NOW. THE WEEKEND IS LOOKING GORGEOUS. ALMOST AS GOOD AS WE DID LOOK TODAY. AS A MATTER OF FACT, AS WE’RE BACK IN THE UPPER 80S AND LOWER 90S INLAND, JUST A TOUCH COOLER ALONG THE COAST. UPPER 80S FOR YOU FOLKS. BUT AS WE CONTINUE ACROSS YOUR SEVEN DAY CERTIFIED MOST ACCURATE FORECAST THIS WEEKEND, WE’LL SEE THAT SUNSHINE RETURN ON SATURDAY AHEAD OF SOME FALL RAIN SHOWERS. SO A LOT TO LOOK FORWARD TO COMING OUR DIRECTION OUT IN DAYTONA BEACH RIGHT NOW. TEMPERATURES HAVE FALLEN BACK INTO THE LOWER 80S. A COUPLE CLOUDS IN THE PICTURE MOMENTARILY. EVENTUALLY YOU’LL CLEAR OUT JUST LIKE EVERYBODY ELSE AS TEMPERATURES DROP INTO THE 70S TONIGHT. RIGHT NOW, THE WINDS ARE COMING IN OFF THE SHORELINE. THAT’S INCREASING THE MOISTURE CONTENT IN THE ATMOSPHERE, BUT IT WILL BE A DRY EVENING OVERALL IN REGARDS TO THE RAINFALL OUT ACROSS I 75. WE HAD A PAIR ACTUALLY A TRIPLET OF 86 DEGREE TEMPERATURES IN OCALA. THE VILLAGES IN WILDWOOD, INSIDE THE CITY. BEAUTIFUL. YOU’RE ROCKING 83 DEGREE TEMPERATURES HERE AT 718. AND OVER THE COURSE OF YOUR EVENING, YOU’LL SEE THOSE WINDS BEGIN TO CALM DOWN AS WELL. WITH THIS SYSTEM OF LOW PRESSURE PUSHING FURTHER TOWARDS THE EAST, OPENING THE DOOR FOR HIGH PRESSURE IN DRIER CONDITIONS OVERNIGHT. BEAUTIFUL WEATHER FOR SOME FRIDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL AS THE O’GALLEY COMMODORES ARE TAKING ON THE COCOA KNIGHTS IN BREVARD COUNTY, SHOWERS ARE NO LONGER IN THE PICTURE. JUST A LIGHT BREEZE WILL BE PRESENT OVER THE DURATION OF THE GAME. ALSO, THE OSCEOLA COWBOYS TAKING ON THE JONES FIGHTING TIGERS. A LITTLE BIT BREEZY EARLY ON. WE TALKED ABOUT THOSE WIND SPEEDS JUST A MOMENT AGO. WE’VE SEEN THE GUSTS AS HIGH AS 20MPH. RIGHT NOW THEY SIT BETWEEN 10 AND 15 MILE PER HOUR CONDITIONS AND YOU’RE PARTLY CLOUDY OVER THE DURATION OF YOUR GAME AS WELL. OFF IN MELBOURNE WE DO SEE THOSE SKIES CLEARING OVERNIGHT. TEMPERATURE WISE WE DROP INTO THE UPPER 70S BEFORE THE NIGHT IS SAID AND DONE, PAVING THE WAY FOR PARTLY CLOUDY SKIES EARLY ON. NOW, ALONG THE COAST, THERE’S A SMALL CHANCE FOR A FEW SHOWERS WITH THAT EAST COAST SEA BREEZE PULLING IN. WE’LL HOLD ON TO THAT SMALL OPPORTUNITY IN THE AFTERNOON. THE MAJORITY OF YOUR DAY ON SATURDAY, THOUGH, WILL BE FILLED WITH SUNSHINE UNTIL WE START TO WATCH OUT FOR THE SMALL CHANCE FOR SOME SHOWERS AND STORMS. AS WE TAKE A LOOK AT YOUR WEEKEND FORECAST ON FUTURECAST. HERE’S THAT HIGH PRESSURE CENTER THAT I WAS TALKING ABOUT, RIGHT? ANYTIME YOU HAVE A HIGH SURROUNDING YOUR NECK OF THE WOODS, YOU CAN EXPECT SOME FAIR WEATHER CONDITIONS. ALMOST. THINK OF IT AS A DOME BLOCKING OUT THAT CONVECTIVE ACTIVITY FROM ENTERING. WINDS ARE ALSO PRIMARILY COMING IN FROM THE NORTH, AND THAT WILL KEEP YOU RIGHT AROUND YOUR SEASONAL AVERAGE, IF NOT JUST A BIT WARMER. AS FAR AS RAIN COVERAGE IS CONCERNED, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY LOOK PRISTINE. THIS WEEKEND, A 30% COVERAGE OF SHOWERS INLAND ON SATURDAY, A 20% CHANCE ON SUNDAY. UNFORTUNATELY, AS WE SWING INTO THE FIRST DAY OF FALL. RAIN CHANCES WILL BE ELEVATED AND THAT’S COURTESY OF A STALLED STATIONARY BOUNDARY ACROSS THE ATLANTIC. AS WE TAKE YOU OUT TO THE ATLANTIC, OF COURSE, THE MAJOR HEADLINE THAT’S TROPICAL STORM GABRIELLE, IN WHICH SOME MODELS, AS WE HEAD INTO THE START OF YOUR WORKWEEK, ARE INDICATING THIS FEATURE COULD INTENSIFY TO A CATEGORY TWO OR A CATEGORY THREE STORM. AS WE TAKE A PEEK AT THE CONE OF UNCERTAINTY. CATEGORY ONE ON SUNDAY. THAT’S SUNDAY EARLY ON IN THE MORNING. MAX WINDS AT 75MPH. BUT LOOK WHAT HAPPENS AS WE JUMP AHEAD TO THE START OF THE WORKWEEK ON MONDAY. 105 MILE PER HOUR CONDITIONS AS THE SYSTEM WILL BE JUST EAST OF THE ISLANDS OF BERMUDA. BACK HERE AT HOME, THOUGH, NO IMPACTS TO US IN REGARDS TO TROPICAL STORM GABRIELLE. BUT WE SEE THAT ELEVATED RAIN CHANCE ON MONDAY TO KICK OFF THE WORKWEEK, COURTESY OF THAT STALLED STATIONARY BOUNDARY. THEREFORE, AS FALL BEGINS ON MONDAY, IT’S A 50% COVERAGE OF SHOWERS WITH TEMPERATURES IN THE LOWER 90S. AND THE LOWER 90S WILL BE A FREQUENT SPOT FOR US BEC

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle forecast to strengthen into hurricane this weekend, NHC says

    Updated: 7:44 PM EDT Sep 19, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle is expected to strengthen this weekend, according to the National Hurricane Center. The NHC said Gabrielle is forecast to become a hurricane by Sunday and pass east of Bermuda Sunday night and Monday.Gabrielle has maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and a minimum central pressure of 1004 mb. The system is moving west-northwest at a speed of 12 mph. There are no coastal watches or warnings in effect at this time. However, the NHC advised Bermuda to monitor the progress of Gabrielle. Eastern tropical waveA tropical wave is producing showers and thunderstorms off the coast of Africa, according to the NHC.Slow development of this system is possible as it moves west-northwestward across the central tropical Atlantic. Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 0%Formation chance through the next 7 days: 20%Hurricane season 2025The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Stay with WESH 2 online and on-air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.>> More: 2025 Hurricane Survival GuideThe First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle is expected to strengthen this weekend, according to the National Hurricane Center.

    The NHC said Gabrielle is forecast to become a hurricane by Sunday and pass east of Bermuda Sunday night and Monday.

    Gabrielle has maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and a minimum central pressure of 1004 mb.

    The system is moving west-northwest at a speed of 12 mph.

    There are no coastal watches or warnings in effect at this time. However, the NHC advised Bermuda to monitor the progress of Gabrielle.

    Eastern tropical wave

    A tropical wave is producing showers and thunderstorms off the coast of Africa, according to the NHC.

    Slow development of this system is possible as it moves west-northwestward across the central tropical Atlantic.

    Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 0%

    Formation chance through the next 7 days: 20%

    Hurricane season 2025

    The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Stay with WESH 2 online and on-air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.

    >> More: 2025 Hurricane Survival Guide

    The First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Tropical Storm Gabrielle ‘poorly organized’ over the Atlantic, but expected to strengthen, NHC says

    [ad_1]

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle formed over the Atlantic on Wednesday, according to the National Hurricane Center. The NHC said Gabrielle is poorly organized and battling strong wind shear as it jogs toward the west-northwest. Gabrielle has maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and a minimum central pressure of 1004 mb.The NHC said little change in strength is forecast during the next 48 hours, but some gradual intensification is forecast over the weekend. Tropical Storm Gabrielle could strengthen into a hurricane. However, it is not expected to affect land during the next several days.There are no coastal watches or warnings in effect at this time. Eastern tropical waveA new tropical wave is expected to move off the coast of Africa by Friday, according to the NHC.Slow development of this system is possible as it moves west-northwestward across the central tropical Atlantic. Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 0%Formation chance through the next 7 days: 20%Hurricane season 2025The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Stay with WESH 2 online and on-air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.>> More: 2025 Hurricane Survival GuideThe First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle formed over the Atlantic on Wednesday, according to the National Hurricane Center.

    The NHC said Gabrielle is poorly organized and battling strong wind shear as it jogs toward the west-northwest.

    Gabrielle has maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and a minimum central pressure of 1004 mb.

    The NHC said little change in strength is forecast during the next 48 hours, but some gradual intensification is forecast over the weekend.

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle could strengthen into a hurricane. However, it is not expected to affect land during the next several days.

    There are no coastal watches or warnings in effect at this time.

    Eastern tropical wave

    A new tropical wave is expected to move off the coast of Africa by Friday, according to the NHC.

    Slow development of this system is possible as it moves west-northwestward across the central tropical Atlantic.

    Formation chance through the next 48 hours: 0%

    Formation chance through the next 7 days: 20%

    Hurricane season 2025

    The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. Stay with WESH 2 online and on-air for the most accurate Central Florida weather forecast.

    >> More: 2025 Hurricane Survival Guide

    The First Warning Weather team includes First Warning Chief Meteorologist Tony Mainolfi, Eric Burris, Kellianne Klass, Marquise Meda and Cam Tran.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Maps show the forecast track of Tropical Storm Gabrielle, the 7th named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season

    [ad_1]

    Tropical Storm Gabrielle formed Wednesday morning over the central Atlantic Ocean, becoming the seventh named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season. Forecasters expect the weather system to remain over open waters for the next several days and haven’t yet warned of any hazards that could potentially affect land. But it may become a low-grade hurricane as it intensifies over the weekend.

    The storm’s current forecast predicts that Gabrielle’s track will carry it north of the Caribbean and away from land, but the system could reach Bermuda next week as it continues to strengthen, CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan said. 

    A map produced by Nolan shows Gabrielle’s anticipated westward path through Monday, at which point it may be packing hurricane-force winds as strong as 85 mph. The storm could develop into a hurricane Sunday as it passes near the Caribbean, according to the map.

    CBS News meteorologist Nikki Nolan produced a map illustrating the potential path of Tropical Storm Gabrielle over the next several days.

    Nikki Nolan for CBS News


    Gabrielle developed before 11 a.m. ET on Wednesday, and in the evening, it was situated roughly 990 miles east of the northern Leeward Islands and tracking northwest at 22 miles per hour, the National Hurricane Center said in an advisory. 

    Its maximum sustained winds on Wednesday night were 50 mph, just over the threshold that differentiates a tropical depression from a tropical storm. Gabrielle grew from a tropical depression in the Atlantic that meteorologists initially flagged earlier on Wednesday.

    Tropical storm force winds extended outward some 175 miles from Gabrielle’s center on Wednesday morning, the Hurricane Center said, adding that the storm’s path and overall forecast remained “highly uncertain” as its center was still poorly defined.

    nhc-gabrielle.png

    Another map produced by the National Hurricane Center shows Gabrielle’s potential path toward Bermuda.

    National Hurricane Center


    Gabrielle took shape about one week after what was historically considered the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, which runs annually from June 1 to Nov. 30 and has in the past become most active around Sept. 10. 

    Officials at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration initially predicted the 2025 season would be busier than usual and produce more named storms than an average year, but hurricane activity has so far been quieter than anticipated

    At the start of the season, NOAA’s outlook suggested that between 13 and 19 named storms would form in the Atlantic, with as many as nine strengthening into hurricanes and as many as five becoming Category 5 storms, which are the most powerful. The agency revised the outlook slightly in August, predicting that the season would see 13 to 18 named storms, including five to nine hurricanes, two of which could be major.

    Of the six named tropical storms that have developed this year before Gabrielle, only one, Chantal, made landfall.

    contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  •  Highs and Lows on the Family Farm

    [ad_1]

    At 55 years old, Willie Scott (above) has been farming ever since he could walk. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    At 55 years old, Willie Scott has been farming ever since he could walk. 

    “The first thing I learned to drive was a tractor at seven,” said the Collins, Georgia native. 

    His 800-acre, third-generation family farm in Tatnall County was passed down from his grandfather to his father and eventually to Scott. The farm has been in the family since his grandfather purchased it in the 1940s.

    In the more than 30 years that he has run his commercial farm, Scott has seen some high moments, like the surge in cotton prices around 2021, a past partnership with Target, and simply doing something he loves for a living, he said. However, being in this business also has its low moments. Just this past month, he has been hit with a challenge that neither he nor researchers fully understand.

    It’s tiny—smaller than a gnat at about one-tenth of an inch. It flies from leaf to leaf, pale green with a brown spot on each of its itty-bitty wings. The green leaf hopper, Amrasca bigtulla, better known as cotton jassid, is rapidly spreading across Georgia’s cotton belt, according to the Georgia Department of Agriculture (USDA), impacting more than 40 counties and farms across the state, including Scott’s.

    In the more than 30 years that he has run his commercial farm, Scott (left) has seen some high moments, like the surge in cotton prices around 2021, a past partnership with Target, and simply doing something he loves for a living. Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Georgia’s Cotton at Risk

    With cotton prices already low and demand dropping for U.S.-grown cotton, this little pest is just another setback for farmers. Georgia is one of the top cotton-producing states in the country, according to the USDA. Cotton stretches over more than a million acres here. That means when something like the jassid shows up, it puts Georgia’s cotton industry at risk, but could also impact others across the nation. 

    For the past six years, cotton has been Scott’s main revenue driver. Currently occupying over 400 acres of his land, he says the jassid has already touched most of it, leaving him searching for a way to stop the attack.

    How did they get here?

    The cotton jassid is native to the Indian subcontinent, according to Dr. Phillip Roberts, a cotton Extension entomologist and professor at the University of Georgia who has been researching the pest even before it reached Georgia. The insect first appeared in Puerto Rico in 2023, then in Florida in 2024, and was spotted in Georgia’s Seminole County on July 9, 2025.

    How it traveled to Georgia remains uncertain. “Who knows,” said Dr. Roberts. “Potentially, they could have moved up with the storm. We had a lot of hurricanes last year and could have pulled insects like them here to Georgia.”

    For the past six years, cotton has been Scott’s main revenue driver. Currently occupying over 400 acres of his land, Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    How does it spread?

    The pest feeds on the underside of cotton leaves, releasing a yellow toxin that weakens the plant’s ability to photosynthesize, according to a recent University of Georgia report. Though largely found on cotton, it also feeds on okra, eggplant, and sunflowers.

    “We can find this insect on nearly all of the cotton in the Coastal Plain, which is about 98% of Georgia’s crop,” said Dr. Roberts. Since July, it has been traced in more than 40 counties.

    Scott first heard about the jassid at a Georgia Cotton Committee meeting last month, where he serves on the board. Soon after, he spotted it in neighboring counties. “That’s when I got nervous,” he said. Within weeks, it was on his land.

    Walking through his fields, Scott points out the tiny, gnat-sized insects, their color blending into the leaves. “If you look really closely, you can see one right there,” he said, turning over a cotton leaf as a few of the pests crawled on the back. Their short lifespan means they can reproduce quickly, with females laying 18 to 30 eggs at a time and regenerating every two weeks, sometimes less.

    Even though the insects may be hard to see, the damage is not. “I lost all that cotton with the red at the top,” Scott said. Dr. Roberts’ research has shown that when the pest sucks the juice from the cotton plant, the leaves begin to shrivel, eventually turning red, and at that stage, there’s not much that can be done.

    Can it be stopped?

    Researchers at UGA Cooperative Extension and the Georgia Cotton Commission are testing insecticides, including Bidrin, Argyle, Assailas, Carbine, Centric, Transform, Sefina, Sivanto, and Bifenthrin. So far, Bidrin has been the most consistent among commercial farmers.

    Scott is currently spraying Bidrin. He says it appears to be working, but he’s waiting to see how effective it really is.

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    At such an inconvenient time

    The jassid arrived at a financially crushing time for many cotton farmers. “The cotton market right now is really bad,” said Dr. Camp Hand, a Georgia cotton agronomist and professor at UGA. “If you were to book some [cotton] right now for December, it would sell for about 67 cents a pound, which is way below the price it takes to produce the crop.” Prices have been consistently that low since the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.

    An acre of cotton yields about 880 pounds, or roughly $589 in sales. For Scott, production costs run about $700 per acre, leaving him at a loss similar to many other cotton farmers. The pesticides alone add another $20 per acre. If the insecticide doesn’t work, Scott estimates he could lose around $8,000. “The only thing we can do is just hope and pray that what we’re doing works,” he said.

    Although consumers may not bear the added costs, farmers like Scott are the ones paying for it. The price of cotton is set on the global market, leaving farmers with little control over how much their crop is worth. As cotton prices have decreased over the past few years, demand for U.S. cotton has declined, as more people turn to synthetic fabrics like polyester, both Scott and Dr. Hand explained.

    To make matters worse, the jassid arrived just before harvest season, which is typically October through November. Scott said harvesting the cotton early is not a good option, as cotton bolls have not yet matured.

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    What’s next?

    When asked about the potential long-term impact of this pest and solutions, Dr. Hand said, “That’s the million-dollar question. Right now, we’re just trying to survive 2025.”

    Despite the unexpected challenge, Scott refuses to be discouraged. “It’s kind of like football—you’re trying to score that touchdown, and different things are out there trying to stop you. But you’ve got to have in your mind to say, ‘I’m getting to the end zone.’”

    [ad_2]

    Tabius McCoy, Report for America Corp Member

    Source link

  • The peak of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season is here

    [ad_1]

    Hurricane season in the Atlantic Ocean spans June through November, and this year was forecasted to be near to above average.


    What You Need To Know

    • The 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season was forecasted to be near to above average
    • Through early Sept. 2025, there have only been six named storms
    • The climatological peak of hurricane season is on Sept. 10


    However, as we approach the climatological peak of the season, we’ve only had six named storms. 

    2025 Atlantic Season predictions

    Both the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Colorado State University (CSU) made their seasonal forecasts back in May and updated them in August. The latest outlooks predict an above-average season: 13 to 18 tropical cyclones (down from 13 to 19 named storms) for NOAA and 16 named storms for CSU (down from 17 to 24 named storms).

    The new predictions include the six named storms we’ve already seen. The average number of named storms is around 14 per season.

    How the season began

    Tropical Storm Andrea formed on June 23, 2025. This marked the latest start to a season since 2014. 

    Next, Tropical Storm Barry formed toward the end of June and made landfall in Veracruz, Mexico. 

    After Barry, Tropical Storm Chantal impacted the southeastern U.S. The storm made landfall in South Carolina on July 6, bringing tropical storm force-winds and flooding rainfall to the Carolinas. 

    Flooding from Chantal at Cooper Road at the Haw River canoe access in Graham, North Carolina. (Graham Police Department)

    Tropical Storm Dexter followed, and next, Hurricane Erin. Erin became a large and powerful Category 5 storm. The storm stayed well off the coast of the U.S., but it brought dangerous rip currents to most of the eastern seaboard.

    Tropical Storm Fernand formed in mid-August and stayed offshore. Here’s a look at the 2025 hurricane season so far

    Since then, there has been a lull in tropical activity. 

    Still a lot of the season to go

    In September and early October, storms are most likely to form in the central Atlantic and the Caribbean. However, as more frontal boundaries move through the U.S. at this time, it’s possible for tropical cyclones to develop along old fronts in the Gulf of Mexico and off of the southeast coast. 

    “We are just coming up on the halfway mark of the hurricane season, usually the time of peak activity,” says Dr. Frank Marks, a meteorologist in the Hurricane Research Division of NOAA/Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory. 

    Don’t let the lull in the Atlantic lull you to sleep. As we approach the peak with quiet conditions, there’s still plenty of time for more storms to develop.

    Notable September and October tropical cyclones

    Even though many may be focused on fall, hurricane season is ongoing! There have been many tropical cyclones that have formed and made landfall in September and October. 

    Just last year, Hurricane Milton formed in October and rapidly intensified into a powerful Category 5 storm in the Gulf of America. This was the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded over the Gulf since Hurricane Rita in 2005. Milton made landfall as a Category 3 storm near Siesta Key, FL.

    While the outlook over the next seven days looks quiet in the Atlantic, make sure you’re focusing on the forecast as conditions in the open waters can change. Tracking the Tropics.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    [ad_2]

    Meteorologist Britney Hamilton

    Source link

  • Tracking powerful hurricane Kiko as it heads towards Hawaii

    [ad_1]

    Kiko formed off the coast of southern Mexico from a tropical wave. It became a tropical storm on Aug. 31, making it the eleventh named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season. Kiko intensified into a hurricane on Sept. 2. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Kiko is the eleventh named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season
    • It remains a major, powerful hurricane
    • Models have Hurricane Kiko moving close, but to the north of the Hawaiian Islands next week


    Kiko intensified into a Category 4 hurricane on Sept. 3. It weakened to a Category 3 hurricane with winds of 115 mph during the morning hours on Sept. 5, but by the afternoon it had re-intensified back into a Category 4 hurricane.

    It currently has maximum winds of 140 mph. It is moving west-northwest at 10 mph and is located roughly 1000 miles east-southeast of Hilo, HI.

    It is a much smaller storm than Hurricane Erin. Hurricane-force winds extend only 25 miles out from the center, with tropical storm-force winds extending 70 miles out from the center. 


    Models have Kiko taking a west-northwesterly track over the weekend into next week, coming close to Hawaii. 

    While it’s too soon for impact details, the cooler waters near the Aloha State should weaken Kiko greatly. We’ll continue to monitor the track and provide updates. 


     

    Storms that have come close to Hawaii

    Hurricane Hone passed just to the south of the Big Island of Hawaii in 2024 as a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 85 mph. Here are other cyclones that came close to the islands.

    Eastern North Pacific names

    Central North Pacific differences

    The National Hurricane Center monitors tropical activity in the Atlantic and North Eastern Pacific Ocean. If a storm forms between 140° West longitude and the International Date Line, it is the responsibility of the Central North Pacific Warning Center, located in Honolulu, HI. 

    There is a contrast in the names used in the Central Pacific compared to the Eastern Pacific and Atlantic. One list is composed of twelve names. 

    The names are used one after the other. When the bottom of one list is reached, the next name is at the top of the next list. Below is the current list. 

    It is interesting to note that if a storm forms in the Eastern North Pacific and is named in that basin, it will retain its name even if it moves into the Central North Pacific. For this reason, we are tracking Hurricane Kiko, since it formed east of 140° West longitude.

    Tropical Storm Akoni and Tropical Storm Ema formed in the Central North Pacific in 2019. Hurricane Hone brushed past Hawaii in 2024.

    This list will continue to be used until there is a storm named Wale. Three other lists have been generated by the World Meteorological Organization and are at the ready if needed. Hurricane Iona and Tropical Storm Keli formed in the Central North Pacific in 2025.

    Just like in the Atlantic and Eastern North Pacific, if storms are impactful, they can be retired. Four storms have been retired in the Central North Pacific. 

    • Iwa (1982): Retired after impacting Hawaii.
    • Iniki (1992): Retired after affecting Hawaii.
    • Paka (1997): Retired after affecting various islands in Micronesia.
    • Ioke (2006): Retired after impacting Micronesia.

    You can track the rest of the tropics here. 

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    [ad_2]

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

    Source link

  • Maps show Hurricane Kiko’s path and forecast in Pacific as it moves west toward Hawaii

    [ad_1]

    Hurricane Kiko, a powerful Category 4 storm, is swirling in the Pacific Ocean and heading west in a direction toward Hawaii.  

    Forecasters warned that swells from the storm could reach the Hawaiian Islands by the end of the weekend and cause life-threatening surf and rip currents. 

    As of 11 p.m. Eastern Time Friday, the storm was located some 1,130 miles east-southeast of Hilo, Hawaii, and 1,335 miles east-southeast of Honolulu, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center reported in its latest advisory. Its maximum sustained winds were topping 140 mph, and it was moving west-northwest at around 12 mph.

    The storm is expected to continue strengthening into Saturday before a “gradual weakening” begins Sunday, forecasters said.

    No coastal watches or warnings were in effect as of Friday.

    A satellite image of Hurricane Kiko in the Pacific Ocean at about 11:15 p.m. Eastern Time on Sept. 5, 2025. 

    NOAA/NESDIS/STAR


    Maps show Hurricane Kiko’s forecast path 

    While Kiko is traveling slowly, Hawaii is becoming more in its line of sight for potential direct impacts such as winds and rainfall starting Monday. The main threats are forecast for Tuesday, according to Nikki Nolan, a meteorologist for CBS News and Stations. 

    Acting Hawaii Gov. Sylvia Luke on Friday declared a state of emergency due to the possible inclement weather posed by Kiko. “We urge residents and visitors to monitor updates, follow official guidance and prepare accordingly,” Luke said.

    The National Weather Service in Honolulu is monitoring Kiko’s possible impacts and anticipating heavy rainfall leading to potential flooding — along with high surf — early next week. 

    This map details the forecast path of the storm, showing it moving closer to the Hawaiian Islands this weekend:

    kikosept5.png

    CBS News


    Another map, from the National Hurricane Center, shows that tropical-storm-force winds could start affecting Hawaii on Monday.

    Earliest possible arrival time of tropical storm force winds for Hurricane Kiko

    The projected outlook of tropical storm force winds for Hurricane Kiko. Sept. 5, 2025. 

    NOAA


    As the CBS affiliate in Honolulu notes, however, it is too soon to tell where exactly the storm will go in relation to Hawaii, as the forecast track can change.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Maps show Hurricane Lorena’s path and forecast in Pacific as it threatens Mexico

    [ad_1]

    One of two hurricanes churning over the Pacific Ocean early Wednesday could bring heavy rain and perhaps “life-threatening flash floods and mudslides” to Mexico’s Baja California peninsula later in the week, though possibly as a tropical storm, forecasters said.

    Hurricane Lorena just hit hurricane strength, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said but “rapid strengthening” is likely through tonight. Then, the center said, “Fast weakening is expected to begin on Thursday, and Lorena could weaken back to a tropical storm by Friday.”

    The center said that as of 4 a.m. EDT Wednesday, Lorena was about 120 miles south-southwest of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico and some  275 miles south-southeast of Cabo San Lazaro, Mexico and moving northwest at 14 mph with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph — barely hurricane status.

    Hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 10 miles from Lorena’s center and tropical-storm-force winds extended outward as far as 60 miles.

    Hurricane Loreno off Mexico, as seen by a satellite early on Sept. 3, 2025.

    NOAA


    A second hurricane — Kiko — was much stronger and farther west but was posing no threat to land.

    Maps show Hurricane Lorena’s forecast path

    The center of Lorena is forecast to “move parallel to the west coast of the Baja California peninsula today and Thursday and then approach the coast Thursday night and Friday, according to the hurricane center.

    lorena-path-4a-090325.png

    Hurricane Lorena’s projected path as of 4 a.m. EDT on Sept. 3, 2025

    NOAA


    Warnings issued due to Hurricane Lorena

    Mexico’s government posted a tropical storm warning for Baja California Sur’s west coast from Santa Fe to Cabo San
    Lazaro, and a tropical storm watch for Baja California Sur’s coast north of Cabo San Lazaro to Punta Abreojos.

    Hurricane Lorena’s possible impact

    Parts of Baja California Sur and far southeast Baja California could get five-to-ten inches of rain with as much as 15 inches through Friday, the hurricane center. “This will bring the risk of life-threatening flash floods and mudslides, especially in areas of higher terrain,” the hurricane center stressed.

    Hurricane Kiko much stronger but not seen as threat to land

    Hurricane Kiko was already a Category 2 storm with maximum sustained winds of 105 mph early Wednesday and was forecast to get even stronger and become a major hurricane later in the day, the hurricane center said. That would make it a Category 3, with maximum sustained winds between 111 and 129 mph.

    But the center said Kiko wasn’t expected to hit land.

    As of 5 a.m. EDT Wednesday, Kiko was some 1,700 miles east of Hilo, Hawaii and moving west at 7 mph, the center said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Models have Hawaii in Hurricane Kiko’s path

    [ad_1]

    Kiko formed off the coast of southern Mexico from a tropical wave. It became a tropical storm on Aug. 31, making it the fourteenth named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season. Kiko intensified into a hurricane on Sept. 2. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Kiko is the fourteenth named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season
    • It intensified into a Category 4 hurricane with maximum winds of 130 mph
    • Models have Hurricane Kiko moving close to the Hawaiian Islands next week


    Kiko intensified into a Category 4 hurricane on Sept. 3, and currently has maximum winds of 130 mph. It is moving west at 9 mph and is located nearly 1600 miles east of Hilo, HI.


    Models have Kiko taking a west-northwesterly track over the weekend into next week, coming close to Hawaii. 

    While it’s too soon for impact details, the cooler waters near the Aloha State should weaken Kiko greatly. We’ll continue to monitor the track and provide updates. 


     

    Hurricane Hone passed just to the south of the Big Island of Hawaii in 2024 as a Category 1 hurricane with winds of 85 mph. Here are other cyclones that came close to the islands.

    You can track the rest of the tropics here. 

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

    [ad_2]

    Spectrum News Weather Staff

    Source link

  • Tropical Storm Kiko: Tracker map, hurricane update, forecast

    [ad_1]

    Tropical Storm Kiko has formed in the eastern Pacific, set to become a hurricane by Tuesday – Newsweek has rounded up everything you need to know.

    Kiko is not expected to become a threat to land, the National Hurricane Center has said. No coastal watches or warnings have been issued.

    Why It Matters

    While the storm remains far from land, meteorologists are closely monitoring its potential to strengthen into a hurricane and shift course in the coming days.

    Forecasters have said that conditions outside the cone of uncertainty—used to illustrate the likely path of the storm center—may still pose hazards.

    Newsweek has contacted the National Hurricane Center (NHC) via email for comment.

    What To Know

    As of late Sunday, Kiko was located about 1,185 miles west-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California, according to the NHC.

    The system was moving west at roughly 8 mph with maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. The agency forecast that Kiko could become a hurricane by Tuesday.

    “Strengthening is expected during the next couple of days,” before the storm becomes a hurricane, the NHC said.

    Kiko is the 11th named system in the Eastern North Pacific this year.

    Windy.com map showing Kiko storm tracker map.

    Windy.com

    A few weeks ago, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) updated the updated the number of expected named storms to 13-18 (winds of 39 mph or greater), of which 5-9 could become hurricanes (winds of 74 mph or greater), including 2-5 major hurricanes (winds of 111 mph or greater) throughout the hurricane season between June 1 and November 30.

    What People Are Saying

    The National Hurricane Center Miami said: “Kiko has intensified overnight and remains a compact storm.” It added: “Despite somewhat drier mid-level conditions along its forecast track, the combination of light vertical wind shear, warm sea surface temperatures, and Kiko’s small compact core should allow for strengthening in the short term.”

    Acting NOAA Administrator Laura Grimm said at the beginning of August: “NOAA stands ready to provide the forecasts and warnings that are vital for safeguarding lives, property, and communities. As we enter the second half of the season, this updated hurricane outlook serves as a call to action to prepare now, in advance, rather than delay until a warning is issued.”

    NOAA’s National Weather Service Director Ken Graham said: “No two storms are alike. “Every storm presents unique, life-threatening hazards that can impact people in both coastal and inland communities. Have a plan in place, and know the actions you should take before, during and after the wide range of hazards that the hurricane season can bring.”

    What Happens Next

    The next key milestone will be whether Kiko strengthens into a Category 1 hurricane by Tuesday, as forecast.

    Ocean users, including shipping interests and residents of Hawaii and the eastern Pacific, are advised to remain informed through official channels like the NHC and local weather services.

    The Pacific hurricane season runs through November 30.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • New Orleans stands strong 20 years after Hurricane Katrina

    [ad_1]

    This weekend marks 20 years since Hurricane Katrina slammed New Orleans, claiming nearly 1,400 lives and costing the city billions. Despite the immense loss, New Orleans remains resilient and resolute.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • A look at the meteorology behind Hurricane Katrina 20 years later

    [ad_1]

    What started as Tropical Depression Twelve on Aug. 23, 2005, over the Greater Antilles would soon become one of the deadliest hurricanes on record to hit the United States.  

    Traveling through southeastern Florida, up into the Gulf Coast and eventually disintegrating over the Ohio Valley, nothing could prepare those in Katrina’s path for what they are still reeling from to this day, 20 years later

    A look at the path of Hurricane Katrina. 

    CBS News


    How Hurricane Katrina formed 

    A tropical wave moved off the coast of Africa into the Atlantic Ocean on Aug. 11, 2005, on a westward path. As it crossed the Central Atlantic and eventually reached the Leeward Islands, on Aug. 19 it combined with the remnants of what was once Tropical Depression Ten.   

    The tropical wave dominated the interaction and began to form a large area of organized thunderstorms over parts of Puerto Rico.  

    At 2 p.m. ET on Aug. 23, Tropical Depression Twelve formed as a distinct center of circulation and was strengthening about 175 nautical miles southeast of Nassau, Bahamas.  

    As hurricane hunters investigated the storm system, Katrina received its name when it strengthened into a tropical storm with maximum sustained winds of 40 mph on Aug. 24, 2005, at 8 a.m. ET, about 65 nautical miles east-southeast of Nassau.   

    Hurricane Katrina

    The path of Hurricane Katrina before it made its first landfall in the U.S. on Aug. 25, 2025. 

    NOAA


    Tropical Storm Katrina continued on a west-northwestward path toward Florida, as residents had minimal time to prepare. Katrina became a hurricane at 5 p.m. ET on Aug. 25, 2005, with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph. A Category 1 hurricane has a sustained wind speed of 74-95 mph.

    Katrina became a hurricane less than 2 hours before it made landfall in Southern Florida.  

    Katrina made landfall in the U.S. three times 

    Also known as “the forgotten landfall,” the first of three landfalls was made on Aug. 25, 2005, at 6:30 p.m. ET in Hollywood, Florida, as a Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph. It spent about 6 hours overnight traveling through the state of Florida, mostly impacting the Florida Everglades. As it had no fuel source over land, it quickly weakened back down to tropical storm status overnight with 69 mph winds. 

    As Katrina continued on its westward path and eventually reached the Gulf, it quickly regained strength. It became a Category 1 hurricane once again at 2 a.m. ET on Aug. 26, 2005, over the Eastern Gulf. Not only did it start to strengthen, but it also underwent rapid intensification twice in the next 48 hours. 

    Hurricane Katrina

    The path Hurricane Katrina took as it made its second landfall in Louisiana on Aug. 29, 2025. 

    NOAA


    Rapid intensification occurs when the maximum sustained winds of a tropical cyclone increase by at least 35 mph in a 24-hour period. Katrina jumped from 75 mph to 109 mph from Aug. 26 to the morning of Aug. 27. It underwent rapid intensification a second time, from Aug. 27 to Aug. 28, when it jumped from 115 mph to 167 mph.  

    Katrina reached its peak intensity with maximum sustained winds of 173 mph at 2 p.m. ET on Aug. 28, about 170 nautical miles southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River.  

    Hurricane Katrina

    In this satellite image from the NOAA, Hurricane Katrina is seen in the Gulf of Mexico on Aug. 28, 2005. 

    NOAA via Getty Images


    Katrina experienced an Eyewall Replacement Cycle

    Katrina was so intense in strength that it also experienced what is known as an Eyewall Replacement Cycle. This occurs when the eyewall, which is where the strongest winds of a tropical system are, reaches its maximum capacity, so much so that another eyewall forms on the outside of it. This cuts off fuel to the original eyewall and eventually diminishes it, resulting in the system weakening, as well. This occurred with Katrina on Aug. 28, leading to the rapid weakening prior to its second landfall on the Gulf Coast. 

    That second landfall took place on Aug. 29, 2005, at 7:10 a.m. ET in Buras, Louisiana, as a Category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 127 mph. It quickly made a technical third landfall on the Louisiana-Mississippi border at 10:45 a.m. ET, as a slightly weaker Category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 121 mph. 

    Hurricane Katrina

    The three landfalls made by Hurricane Katrina. August 2005. 

    CBS News


    If a storm is a Category 3, 4 or 5, it is deemed a “major” hurricane due to the potential for “significant loss of life and damage,” the National Hurricane Center says.

    As expected, the storm lost its fuel from the warm waters of the Gulf as it moved over land. Katrina rapidly weakened to a Category 1 hurricane by 2 p.m. ET and a tropical storm only 6 hours later, at midnight on Aug. 30, 2005. It became a tropical depression over the Tennessee Valley by 8 a.m. ET on Aug. 30, but fully transitioned into a remnant low-pressure system by 8 p.m. ET that day.  

    Some facts and figures:

    • Numerous observations of high storm surge were investigated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which determined that upwards of 24-to-28-foot storm surge was observed along the Mississippi coast.  

    • Storm surge was also observed to cross over Interstate 10 in several locations, with the highest east of Katrina’s eye path.

    • Even after the initial threat of Katrina had passed, the intensity of the storm surge put a strain on the New Orleans levee system. Levees are either manmade or natural embankments that help control the flow of water to protect land and communities. Storm surge overtopped and broke through levees and floodwalls, which caused excessive flooding in the New Orleans area.  

    • About 80% of New Orleans flooded, with some depths reaching up to 20 feet within the first 24 hours of Katrina’s landfall.  

    • Katrina also produced a total of 43 tornadoes in the Florida Keys, Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi.  

    • 1,392 total fatalities were attributable to Katrina, according to a 2023 report from the National Hurricane Center. And according to the hurricane center, Louisiana reported that people over the age of 60 made up the majority of Katrina deaths in that state.  

    • Katrina contributed to about $125 billion in damage in 2005, according to the hurricane center — the costliest in U.S. history. Adjusting for inflation, that would be about $186.3 billion in 2022 dollars. 

    • On Aug. 28, 2005, at 2 p.m. ET, Katrina’s measured barometric pressure fell to 902 millibars, which was the fourth-lowest on record in the Atlantic Ocean. However, it has since dropped to sixth-lowest, behind Hurricane Rita and Hurricane Wilma, both of which occurred later in 2005.  

    • When Katrina made landfall in Buras, Louisiana, the measured pressure was at 920 millibars, which is the lowest on record in the Atlantic Ocean for a hurricane at an intensity of 127 mph. 

    • The strongest sustained winds measured at a fixed location on land from Katrina were at 4:20 a.m. ET on Aug. 29, 2005, at 88 mph.  

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 20 years after Katrina, a Mississippi town is still waiting on FEMA funding to rebuild

    [ad_1]

    Biloxi, Mississippi — Twenty years ago Friday, Katrina made its second and most destructive U.S. landfall, coming ashore just southeast of New Orleans as a Category 3 hurricane. 

    While the damage and destruction left by Katrina in 2005 changed New Orleans forever, the storm surge and powerful winds also left a lasting blow to other parts of the Gulf Coast, including Alabama and Mississippi.

    Two decades later, Biloxi, Mississippi, is still trying to rebuild. Mayor Andrew “FoFo” Gilich says it has been a constant battle with the Federal Emergency Management Agency over funding.

    To rebuild the city’s pier stronger than before, the city says it needs $4 million. Gilich says FEMA has proposed a different number: $555,000.

    “$555,000, which in my mind is absolutely ridiculous, you can’t build anything with that,” Gilich told CBS News. 

    The biggest unfinished project, though, has been upgrades to the city’s sewage and stormwater system in order to better protect Biloxi from the next monster storm.

    “We can’t bid these last two projects unless we have assurance of funding,” Gilich said.

    Gilich said FEMA still owes Biloxi $34 million to finish work planned about 20 years ago. FEMA won’t pay it until Biloxi begins the work on the final phase, but Gilich says he doesn’t want to start something he knows he won’t be able to afford to finish. The mayor said as time has passed, the cost of supplies and labor has outpaced the original estimates. 

    Gilich says the city now needs $111 million to finish the project, but FEMA has denied his request for more money — twice. 

    “I’m not bashful, and they [FEMA] understand, you know, where our concern is,” said Gilich, who described the way he feels his city has been treated by FEMA as “just ridiculous.” 

    Biloxi submitted a second appeal to FEMA this summer. 

    Over the years, FEMA has tried to claw back some of the money provided for earlier phases of the sewage system upgrades, claiming that the city has not used the federal money it has received appropriately. Biloxi and FEMA reached a court settlement over those concerns a few years ago. 

    Gilich says FEMA’s allegations are “not right.”

    “Bottom line, I’m here to say we’ve done everything we could possibly do,” Gilich added.

    In documentation Biloxi provided to CBS News, FEMA’s denial this summer of Biloxi’s request was due to the fact that the city, “has not provided documentation substantiating the reasonableness of the costs claimed or demonstrating any errors or omission in the approved…cost estimate requiring adjustment of the costs agreed upon.”

    Biloxi is not alone in its struggles with FEMA. CBS News found 254 other FEMA Katrina relief projects through the agency that were designed to help municipalities across Louisiana and Mississippi that still aren’t done.

    Gilich said the experience is “almost like dealing with insurance agents. The delay, depose and deny.”

    Complicating matters is the Trump administration’s efforts to potentially overhaul FEMA, and controversy over cuts to some disaster mitigation grants, among other funding changes. CBS News reported in May that FEMA has lost about one-third of its staff through a combination of firings and buyouts.

    And earlier this week, a group of 181 current and former FEMA officials signed on to an open letter that said the White House’s changes to the agency could undo decades of reforms that were enacted post-Katrina. More than 20 employees who publicly signed their names to the letter have since been suspended.  

    In May, U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem testified before Congress about her plans to improve the agency’s processes.   

    “We still have claims outstanding in FEMA from Hurricane Katrina,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, whose department oversees FEMA, testified before the House in May. “Wildfire claims from out West that are 10 years old, where people said, ‘We have this claim, this loss. FEMA committed to pay it and still has not followed through on it.’ We saw political targeting that happened in North Carolina, where individuals within FEMA decided who could get help and who didn’t get help. So that needs to end. And this needs some integrity to it and making sure the federal government is there for support, but [that] the states are empowered to do the emergency response is very important to President Trump.”

    Gilich has traveled to D.C. three times already this year to advocate for his city. He said he’s feeling cautiously optimistic that the funding will eventually come through and the rebuilding process will be complete within about three years.

    “The end result is righteous,” Gilich said. “It’s going to be something that we can sustain a lot of the things, you know, as far as what Mother Nature throws at us.”  

    In a statement provided to CBS News Thursday in response to a question about those communities who say they are still waiting on post-Katrina funding, a FEMA spokesperson said, in part, that “it’s ridiculous, unacceptable, and absurd that FEMA is still working and processing claims from a disaster that happened 20 years ago. This is an example of unnecessary red tape and a broken government agency that does not work in the best interest of the American people. We’re moving away from the bloated, DC-centric model of the past and creating a lean, fast, and effective disaster response agency focusing on empowering states and local communities to lead the way in helping their citizens, with FEMA standing ready to support.”

    The spokesperson noted that the FEMA Review Council, established by President Trump in January, “is conducting a thorough review to ensure FEMA delivers swift, effective disaster response for Americans.” 

    That council is expected to release a final report with “actionable recommendations,” the spokesperson said.

    The FEMA spokesperson also added that, “To date, FEMA has provided impacted states with significant federal assistance, including over $6.6 billion in Individual Assistance – which includes money for rent, basic home repairs and other disaster-caused needs – and over $17.1 billion in Public Assistance reimbursements has been approved for recovery projects like rebuilding roads, bridges, and other critical infrastructure.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Mississippi town is still waiting on FEMA funding to rebuild 20 years after Katrina

    [ad_1]

    While the damage and destruction left by Katrina in 2005 changed New Orleans forever, the sea surge and powerful winds also left a lasting blow to other parts of the Gulf Coast, including the Mississippi city of Biloxi. Two decades later, they’re still trying to rebuild. Kati Weis reports.

    [ad_2]

    Source link