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.
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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.
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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.
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Metro Orlando and surrounding cities have already received 6 inches of rain. Another 8-10 inches of rain is possible through Thursday.
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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.
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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