© 2026 WGCU News
PBS and NPR for Southwest Florida
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Into a Category 5: Water-borne drone looks into Hurricane Beryl

A still photo taken by Saildrone 1041 Tuesday in the outer edges of Hurricane Beryl.
Courtesy Saildrone and NOAA
/
WGCU
A still photo taken by Saildrone 1041 Tuesday in the outer edges of Hurricane Beryl.

A saildrone, SD-1041, deployed to intercept Hurricane Beryl, sent back photos, video and data from the major storm on Tuesday.

As of 5 p.m. Tuesday, Hurricane Beryl was 422.5 miles ESE of Kingston, Jamaica. The hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 155 mph.

More about Beryl

The saildrones are operated by Saildrone, Inc. of Alameda, Calif. The company's fleet of uncrewed surface vehicles are powered by renewable wind and solar power and designed to scale ocean data collection.

Saildrone vehicles operate 24/7/365 without the need for a crewed support vessel. Saildrone USVs have sailed more than 1,000,000 nautical miles from the Arctic to the Antarctic and spent over 32,000 days at sea in the harshest ocean conditions on the planet.

video_20240702_133050_0_logo (1).mp4

Beryl is forecasted to weaken slightly from category 4 to 3 as it passes over Jamaica.

SD-1041 was deployed from St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, on June 24, the drone's second hurricane mission. It was previously deployed for the 2023 hurricane mission (also from St. Thomas); it was also deployed to the Arctic in 2019 and 2022.

SD-1041 is one of 12 Saildrone Explorer uncrewed surface vehicles that will be deployed this season for hurricane monitoring.

Saildrone was expected to deliver hurricane monitoring data for NOAA beginning the first week of August, however, SD-1041 went on mission early to sail toward an intercept with Hurricane.

video_20240702_104549_0_logo (1).mp4

As it approached the northern edge of Hurricane Beryl (as a major category 5 hurricane), SD-1041 experienced increased wind speeds and significant wave height, along with a decrease in pressure and several rapid decreases in air temperature from associated rain bands.

  • 1 min interval: Lowest pressure measured was 1009.67 with associated winds  (~3 m height) of 38 mph sustained, gusts 44 mph and significant wave height of 6.508 meters.
  • Largest sustained waves observed were 7.79 meters @ 12.8 sec
  • Strongest winds measured (~3 m height) were 50 mph sustained, gusts 61.5 mph.

WGCU is your trusted source for news and information in Southwest Florida. We are a nonprofit public service, and your support is more critical than ever. Keep public media strong and donate now. Thank you.

Trusted by over 30,000 local subscribers

Local News, Right Sized for Your Morning

Quick briefs when you are busy, deeper explainers when it matters, delivered early morning and curated by WGCU editors.

  • Environment
  • Local politics
  • Health
  • And more

Free and local. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

More from WGCU
  • The Town of Fort Myers Beach will begin issuing violation notices in the coming weeks to short-term rental properties that are not registered with the Town. The Town has identified approximately 500 short-term rentals currently operating without the required registration. Many of these rentals are managed by property management companies that have not completed the registration process.
  • The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) is boosting safety and convenience along I-75 with upcoming installations. A pre-construction information session covering new interchange construction at I-75 at Toledo Blade Boulevard and Sumter Boulevard in Sarasota County will be held on Tuesday, Jan 6.
  • Animals in south Florida don’t have to worry much about winter cold – and indeed many migrants from areas farther north find suitable living conditions here. But, a trip to the beach or on a rare blustery day sometimes makes one wonder. How do ducks, herons, egrets, and other birds tolerate wading or swimming in cold weather? Aquatic birds, for example, have bare skinny legs with leg muscles placed among insulating feathers.Blood vessels going to and from the very few muscles in the legs and feet lie right next to one another, and cold blood going back into the body is warmed by warmer blood coming from the body – and is nearly the same temperature as the blood circulating in the well-insulated body.