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Tornado2

Storms whip up multiple waterspouts and hail in the Florida Keys

Waterspout north of Upper Sugarloaf Key
© Jason Harding
Waterspout north of Upper Sugarloaf Key
Parts of the Florida Keys got more than 3 inches of rain on Wednesday and pea-sized hail with afternoon thunderstorms that rolled through on the west winds.

The storms also spun up multiple waterspouts.

Researchers estimate about 500 waterspouts form off Florida each year, and many of those are concentrated along the state's southeast shore.

When waterspouts form from storm clouds, those clouds can carry them onshore, at which point they are considered tornadoes. But they are usually much weaker, and of shorter duration, than a tornado that has formed over land. A typical waterspout is more stationary than a tornado, and lasts only about 5 to 10 minutes.


Tornado2

Waterspout filmed near Hong Kong as Tropical Storm Ewiniar moves away

A waterspout seen near the right.
© Hong Kong Observatory.
A waterspout seen near the right.
Tropical Storm Ewiniar is set to move inland towards western Guangdong with gusts of 100km/h affecting Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Observatory said Friday.

As of 1:00pm the Amber Rainstorm Warning Signal remained in force. The Signal was issued on Friday morning, and the Observatory briefly hoisted the Red Rainstorm Warning Signal from 11:30am to 12:30pm.

"Over 50mm rainfall has been recorded generally over Hong Kong, and over 100mm rainfall was also recorded over the western part, southern part, and eastern part of Hong Kong," the Observatory said.

The Strong Wind Signal no.3 remains in force, and the Observatory has also issued a Thunderstorm Warning and Landslip Warning.


Snowflake Cold

Unusual 'killer' spring frost damages crops across the Canadian Maritimes

The Benjamin Bridge winery is seen in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley on June 6, 2018.

The Benjamin Bridge winery is seen in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley on June 6, 2018.
An unusual "killer" frost has caused widespread damage to crops in the Maritimes, with everything from Nova Scotian wine grapes to Island asparagus harmed by a sharp plunge in spring temperatures.

Farmers were beginning to assess the toll from the June cold front that hit Monday, as word came from Environment Canada of yet another frost advisory for early Thursday in all of Atlantic Canada.

"It's the beginning of the year and it's a bad time for something like this to happen, just as the growing season begins," Keith Colwell, Nova Scotia's minister of agriculture, said in a telephone interview Wednesday.


Cloud Lightning

France doubles its record with 182 000 lightning strikes in May, 4 killed in recent storms

eiffel tower lightning
© Bertrand Kulik.
Amazing image of #Lightning hitting the Eiffel tower, in Paris, France. This image was taken 28th May 2018.
With 182 000 lightning strikes in May 2018, France has almost doubled its previous record figure for the same month set in 2009. Four lives were lost over the past two weeks.

The storms brought a record number of lightning strikes as well as record amounts of rain in some areas.


Comment: This follows January where most areas saw double the usual rainfall.


According to Meteo France, the number of lightning strikes across the country in May 2018 reached 182 000, which is almost double the previous record for May set in 2009.

Comment: Record breaking weather is on the rise, often with the previous record being set only a few years before, or in some cases, such as for cold, a hundred years earlier.

It was an unusually cold start to spring in Europe followed by heatwaves, epic storms and flooding. And this extreme weather is a worldwide phenomenon:







Bizarro Earth

Flooding from high tides has doubled in the US in just 30 years, report says

A firefighter wades through waters from Boston Harbor
© Michael Dwyer/AP
A firefighter wades through waters from Boston Harbor, which flooded on to Long Wharf on 4 January 2018.
Residents along the United States coastline are dealing with high-tide flooding twice as often as they did three decades ago, according to a NOAA report released Wednesday.

The 2017 State of U.S. High Tide Flooding and 2018 Outlook found more than one-fourth of coastal locations studied broke records for the most high-tide flooding days ever recorded during the 2017 meteorological year - May 2017 through April 2018. On average, the 98 coastal areas studied by NOAA reported coastal "sunny day" flooding in six days during the meteorological year, meaning the weather was hardly the driving factor behind these inundations.

"As relative sea level increases, it no longer takes a strong storm or a hurricane to cause coastal high tide flooding," said a NOAA release. "High tide flooding causes frequent road closures, overwhelmed storm drains and compromised infrastructure."

Along the Southeast's Atlantic coast, the rate at which these sunny-day floods have increased is even more blistering. NOAA's report found high-tide flooding in this part of the U.S. has increased 150 percent since 2000 alone.

The NOAA report also projected high-tide flooding in 2018 to be 60 percent worse than normal rates from two decades ago; the report blames sea level rise as a long-term factor and a possible El Niño later this year as a short-term influence.

Experts agree the report is yet another sign that it's time to develop serious solutions to fight back the rising sea.

"We need to take this report as a warning to prepare ourselves, or we will just sit around and wait for disaster to happen," Andrea Dutton, a geologist at the University of Florida, told the Guardian.

Fire

Guatemala's Fuego volcano toll reaches 109 with almost 200 missing and presumed dead, criticism grows over evacuation

Fuego volcano eruption recovery
© Johan Ordonez/AFP/Getty Images
Municipal firefighters search for victims in the ash-covered village of San Miguel Los Lotes, in Escuintla, about 20 miles southwest of Guatemala City, on Wednesday.
Guatemala's opposition is accusing the head of the country's emergency response agency of failing to heed warnings ahead of the eruption of a volcano that has left 109 dead and almost 200 others missing.

The finger-pointing came as rain showers and the fear of mudslides hindered the search for possible survivors and the recovery of the dead from Sunday's eruption of Fuego (Spanish for fire). It is one of Central America's most active volcanoes.

The volcano blanketed nearby villages in ash and sent fast-moving toxic pyroclastic flows down into valleys as people living nearby rushed to escape the onslaught.

"You have a great responsibility over what happened," Congressman Mario Taracena, speaking in the Guatemalan Congress, said of Sergio Cabañas, the executive secretary of the National Coordinator for Disaster Reduction, also known as CONRED.

"Anyone with a little common sense would have done something," Taracena said, according to El Periódico. "They did not care and they did not take precautions."

The director of the National Institute of Seismology, Volcanology, Meteorology and Hydrology, Eddy Sánchez, also came in for criticism.

Sánchez explained that his agency issued several bulletins during the day ahead of the eruption. However, CONRED officials said they did not receive enough information to properly evaluate the risk posed by the mountain.


Comment: See also:


Attention

Ethiopian pastor killed by crocodile during baptism ceremony

crocodile
A lakeside baptism ceremony ended in disaster when a large crocodile leapt from the water and killed the pastor, it has been reported.

Docho Eshete was allegedly grabbed by the crocodile soon after he started a mass baptism for 80 people on the shores of Lake Abaya in southern Ethiopia.

"He baptised the first person and he passed on to another one," local resident Ketema Kairo told the BBC. "All of a sudden, a crocodile jumped out of the lake and grabbed the pastor."

Pastor Docho was said to have been bitten on his legs, back and hands.

As his horrified congregation looked on, local fishermen reportedly struggled to rescue him. It was said they succeeded only in using their nets to prevent the crocodile from taking the 45-year-old's body into the lake, near the city of Arba Minch.

Snowflake

Global cooling: Snow in June for Cape Breton, Nova Scotia

An adult and baby moose take a morning stroll in the Cape Breton Highlands this morning.
© Marcel Lelievre
An adult and baby moose take a morning stroll in the Cape Breton Highlands this morning.
It's just the second snowfall for Cape Breton in the month for 43 years, says Environment Canada

Cape Bretoners woke up to snow on Wednesday.

Traipsing through the snow and slush isn't something people are used to doing in June, but it's something those in the Cape Breton Highlands had to do this morning.

Linda Libby, a meteorologist with Environment Canada, said it's uncommon to see snow in Cape Breton in June, but it's not unheard of either.

"We really only have one report ever occurring in June," she said. "It's actually later than this — on June 9, 1975 — when you picked up a whole centimetre, which is pretty good."

Comment: See also these other recent reports: Global cooling: June snowfall for Mt. Washington in New Hampshire

Global cooling: Snow falls in June on Charlottetown, Canada

Snow follows record breaking May heatwave in northern Sweden


Attention

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Massive uptick in Earth Changes and mainstream media doesn't report the interconnections

Fuego volcano eruption
© AFP/Getty Images
Fuego volcano eruption on June 3rd 2018, Guatemala's deadliest since 1902
It is almost unthinkable that the media is not reporting on the interconnections of the massive uptick in Earth Changes we are seeing at the moment. Snows in June in seven countries in the Northern Hemisphere, the relationship between increasing galactic cosmic rays and volcanic eruptions and how this in-turn affects our crops globally. They don't want to talk about crop losses or the connecting to next year being more unusual than this year with heavier losses on tap in 2019. This is a full explanation how it all intersects and a forecast going out to 2021.


Comment: The world is seeing a rapid upsurge in extreme weather according to a recent report. For more information on these events from around the world, check out our Earth Changes Summaries. The latest video: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - April 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

Related articles include: To understand how and why these extreme weather events are occurring read Earth Changes and the Human Cosmic Connection by Pierre Lescaudron and Laura Knight-Jadczyk.


Fish

Thousands of dead fish found on Sylvan Beach, Texas - 2nd such incident locally in a week

dead fish
While everyone is looking forward to enjoying the water this summer, you might have to hold your nose if you live in La Porte.

Thousands and thousands of dead fish have washed up on Sylvan Beach this week, and it was all caught on camera.

Eyewitness News viewer Juan Martinez said the fish are creating a terrible smell.

These fish look just like the ones we showed you last week.