Hurricane Milton has been downgraded to a Category 2 hurricane. Milton made landfall on Siesta Key near 8:30 p.m.
830pm EDT Oct 9th: Doppler radar data indicates that the eye of #Hurricane #Milton has made landfall near Siesta Key in Sarasota County on the west coast of Florida.
— National Hurricane Center (@NHC_Atlantic) October 10, 2024
Max sustained winds at landfall are estimated at 120 mph.
Landfall TCU: https://t.co/YUc7mT6LuJ pic.twitter.com/fEODy4AvHJ
Milton’s winds maintained hurricane strength as it crossed the state. Milton’s highest inland winds were expected in Polk Osceola, and eventually Brevard counties.
The onslaught of Milton’s damaging winds and torrential rains will be a concern well into Thursday. As of 11 p.m., Milton’s dangerous storm surge continued to impact the Port Charlotte area, Punta Gorda, Bradenton, and Sarasota areas.
There is also an ongoing risk of rotating thunderstorms that can create dangerous tornadoes. Earlier on Wednesday the Wellington/Palm Beach Gardens area sustained significant damage from a powerful tornado.
Wow! My cousin sent this to me by a neighbor of his of the tornado that struck Wellington, FL from earlier today. Incredible speed & power that tornado possessed. #HurricaneMilton #flwx pic.twitter.com/QnF8hRQTQo
— Thee 🌪ornadorologist (@tornadorology) October 9, 2024
Along with the severe weather threat, there is a substantial risk for additional flash flood emergencies along the I-4 corridor in the coming hours.
Metro Orlando and surrounding cities have already received 6 inches of rain. Another 8-10 inches of rain is possible through Thursday.
Earlier this evening, the St. Pete area received over 16 inches of rain and was under a flash flood emergency, which is the highest flash flooding threat issued. As of 11PM, a flash flood emergency continued for Lakeland, Winter Haven and Wesley Chapel until 4AM Thursday morning.
UPDATE (10:10ET): #Milton is no longer a major hurricane. Rather, a strong Category 2.
— Jackson Fuentes (@Jfuenteswx) October 10, 2024
A FLASH FLOOD EMERGENCY continues for Tampa, St. Pete, Clearwater. Sting jet currently pushing gusts to 110mph through Sarasota near Milton’s center. #flwx #tropics pic.twitter.com/nW9NWpdMLY
The Tampa Bay area was spared the brunt of Milton’s storm surge, in fact, Milton created a reverse storm surge across Tampa Bay.
The water has been sucked out of Tampa Bay by Milton.
— Brian Entin (@BrianEntin) October 10, 2024
Happened fast. pic.twitter.com/8ghtF5SZYx
As Milton exits Florida’s east coast, there is still a concern for a storm surge along NE Florida of 3-5 feet and torrential flooding in the central Florida area will likely cause considerable flooding along the St. Johns River and communities all along the northern and central eastern counties.
Make sure to have at least 2 ways to get weather warnings and alerts throughout Thursday to keep up with developing weather.
Copyright 2024 Storm Center