Hurricane Milton Now A Category 5 As It Hits 180 Miles Per Hour, Gov. DeSantis Orders Mandatory Evacuations In Areas To Be Hardest Hit On Florida’s West Coast

Hurricane Milton Now A Category 5 As It Hits 180 Miles Per Hour, Gov. DeSantis Orders Mandatory Evacuations In Areas To Be Hardest Hit On Florida’s West Coast

Florida’s storm-battered Gulf Coast raced against a Category 5 hurricane Monday as workers sprinted to pick up heaps of appliances and other street debris left over from Helene two weeks ago and highways were clogged with people fleeing ahead of the storm.

On the Podcast today, we gave you a 2-hour master class in how ‘man made Climate Change’ is actually weather modification as performed through programs like HAARP and their cloud seeding efforts. If you haven’t listened to that program, you really should. Then you will really understand what climate change is all about, and who it is that is doing the changing.

“And he saith unto them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? Then he arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea; and there was a great calm.” Matthew 8:26 (KJB)

In the meantime, Hurricane Milton is a force to be reckoned with, rapidly becoming a Category 5 hurricane with winds between 180-200 miles per hour. Please pray for the people on the west coast of Florida, as they will be hit the hardest. Say a little prayer for us, also, here in Central Florida. The Milton will go pretty close to straight over our heads as he works his away across the state.

Hurricane Milton is a Category 5. Florida orders evacuations and scrambles to clear Helene’s debris

FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS: The center of Hurricane Milton could come ashore Wednesday in the Tampa Bay region, which has not endured a direct hit by a major hurricane in more than a century. Scientists expect the system to weaken slightly before landfall, though it could retain hurricane strength as it churns across central Florida toward the Atlantic Ocean. That would largely spare other states ravaged by Helene, which killed at least 230 people on its path from Florida to the Carolinas.

“This is the real deal here with Milton,” Tampa Mayor Jane Castor told a news conference. “If you want to take on Mother Nature, she wins 100% of the time.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday that it was imperative for debris from Helene to be cleared ahead of Milton’s arrival so the pieces cannot become projectiles. As evacuation orders were issued, forecasters warned of a possible 8- to 12-foot storm surge (2.4 to 3.6 meters) in Tampa Bay. That’s the highest ever predicted for the region and nearly double the levels reached two weeks ago during Helene, said National Hurricane Center spokeswoman Maria Torres.

The storm could also bring widespread flooding. Five to 10 inches (13 to 25 centimeters) of rain was forecast for mainland Florida and the Keys, with as much as 15 inches (38 centimeters) expected in some places. The Tampa metro area has a population of more than 3.3 million people.

“It’s a huge population. It’s very exposed, very inexperienced, and that’s a losing proposition,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology meteorology professor Kerry Emanuel said. “I always thought Tampa would be the city to worry about most.”

Much of Florida’s west coast was under hurricane and storm surge warnings. A hurricane warning was also issued for parts of Mexico’s Yucatan state, which expected to get sideswiped. Milton’s wind speed increased by 92 mph (148 kph) in 24 hours — a pace that trails only those of Hurricane Wilma in 2005 and Hurricane Felix in 2007. One reason Milton strengthened so rapidly is its small “pinhole eye,” just like Wilma’s, said Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach. The storm will likely go through what’s called an eye wall replacement cycle, a natural process that forms a new eye and expands the storm in size but weakens its wind speeds, Klotzbach said.

The Gulf of Mexico is unusually warm right now, so “the fuel is just there,” and Milton probably went over an extra-warm eddy that helped goose it further, said University of Albany hurricane scientist Kristen Corbosiero. The last hurricane to be a Category 5 at landfall in the mainland U.S. was Michael in 2018. READ MORE

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