Storms
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Cloud Lightning

30,000 lightning strikes recorded overnight across UK by Met Office

Lightning strikes in the sky along Church Street in Witham, Essex, early this morning
Lightning strikes in the sky along Church Street in Witham, Essex, early this morning
More than 30,000 lightning strikes were recorded overnight as powerful thunderstorms swept across the UK (and the bad weather is set to continue).

The Met Office said the "vast majority" of the lightning struck over the sea, but torrential downpours also hit land, causing significant flooding and disruption in Kent.

A major storm reached the county at around 10pm on Friday (June 13), prompting an amber weather warning and leaving homes in Dover under water.

It comes as late on Friday, the Environment Agency issued five flood warnings, where flooding is expected and immediate action is needed.

It also issued 49 flood alerts, meaning flooding is possible.

A further six flood alerts have been put in place by Natural Resources Wales in South Wales.


Windsock

Typhoon Wutip leaves 3 dead, thousands displaced in central Vietnam

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Typhoon Wutip has caused widespread devastation in central Vietnam, resulting in three fatalities and significant damage to agriculture and infrastructure, according to the Vietnam News Agency on Saturday.

Two individuals lost their lives in Trieu Phong district, Quang Tri province, during flood prevention efforts, while a third person drowned in Hai Lang district. In neighbouring Quang Binh province, four people remain missing as search and rescue operations intensify under improving weather conditions.

The flooding has submerged over 21,000 hectares of rice fields, alongside vast areas of vegetable crops and aquaculture ponds. Tens of thousands of poultry have perished, compounding the agricultural losses. Severe flooding has inundated homes, blocked transport routes, and forced evacuations across lowland and mountainous regions, though river levels are now beginning to recede.

The storm, which has weakened to a severe tropical storm, made its second landfall near Leizhou City in Guangdong Province, China, at 12.30am on Saturday, with winds of up to 30 metres per second and a central pressure of 980 hectopascals. This followed its initial landfall near Dongfang City on China's Hainan Island late Friday night.

Wutip is currently moving northeast at a speed of 20 to 25 km per hour, skirting the border between Guangdong and Guangxi provinces while gradually losing intensity. The storm's impact has highlighted the region's vulnerability to severe weather and the urgent need for disaster preparedness.


Comment: Also in central Vietnam just a day prior to the above report: First in a century: Unprecedented summer flood submerges Vietnam's Hue City - almost 3 FEET of rain in 3 days


Snowflake

Australia blasts into ski season with up to 3 feet of snow in huge storm

Australia gets major snow dump to kickoff ski season
Australia gets major snow dump to kickoff ski season
Southern Hemisphere ski season launches with Australia's biggest storm in years, 3 feet of powder, and lifts spinning from Lesotho to New Zealand.

SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE INTRO

The Southern Hemisphere's 2025 ski season got underway at the weekend. It's not quite clear if ski areas in Australia, New Zealand, or indeed Lesotho's Afriski were the first to get their lifts turning on a snowy slope or two, but by Saturday lunchtime, slopes were open in all three countries.

Australian resorts were the most obvious openers, with 75% of the country's ski areas opening at the weekend as a major snowstorm moved in — one of the biggest since 2022 — perfectly timed for the country's opening weekend. There was a big snowfall in New Zealand too, but most areas stuck to their plan of opening from this coming Friday, with nowhere opening early. However, the Manganui Ski Area, run by the Stratford Mountain Club — which aims to open whenever the snow is good enough — did get its lift running at the weekend after a 50cm (20") accumulation there. Lesotho's Afriski also appeared to start offering snowsports on a short slope of machine-made snow, if social media video posts are current.


Tsunami

Best of the Web: First in a century: Unprecedented summer flood submerges Vietnam's Hue City - almost 3 FEET of rain in 3 days

Phong Hoa Ward in Phong Dien Town, Hue City is severely inundated.
© Long NhatPhong Hoa Ward in Phong Dien Town, Hue City is severely inundated.
In a rare and historic weather event, Hue City in central Vietnam is being submerged by an unseasonal flood triggered by storm Wutip, which brought heavy rains to the central region - something not seen in the summer in over a century.

Floodwaters rose swiftly across several districts including Phu Xuan and Quang Dien, inundating homes and prompting emergency responses on Friday.

The widespread flooding began after three consecutive days of torrential rainfall from the impact of storm Wutip, the first to enter the East Vietnam Sea this year.

According to the Hue Steering Committee for Natural Disaster Prevention, Search and Rescue, rainfall has reached extreme levels, ranging from 160 to 400mm in many areas, with Phu Loc and A Luoi Districts recording 400-700mm.

On Friday morning, water levels in key rivers surged dramatically, with the iconic Huong River surpassing alert level two of flooding.

The Bo River neared level three, the highest on the scale.


Comment: CÔNG LÝ 247 reports:
Hue is experiencing a historic mid-summer flood due to the influence of storm No. 1. In the past three days, many places have recorded rainfall of up to nearly 900mm. The water level of Huong River and Bo River exceeded the alarm level, and hydroelectric dams simultaneously released floodwaters, causing many areas in Hue City to be severely flooded.
(Translated by Google)


Tsunami

15 vehicles swept away in San Antonio, Texas flooding, leaving 13 dead, all missing people found - 6 inches of rain in 24 hours (UPDATED)

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At least eight people are dead and six are missing in San Antonio after floodwaters swept away 15 vehicles early Thursday.

Photos of the flooding show vehicles flipped and almost entirely submerged in the water.

The San Antonio Fire Department said on Friday that the death toll has risen to eight, with six people still unaccounted for.

"The primary search efforts are focused on the Salado Creek (Perrin Beitel event) and the Leon Creek near Highway 90 and Callaghan Rd areas," the department said in a statement to NBC News. "The SAFD has requested Urban Search and Rescue assistance from Texas A&M Task Force 1 and at least 40 highly trained search specialists will be assisting our efforts in these locations."

San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said Thursday that bodies were recovered at various locations, including Beitel Creek. One victim was found a mile away, fire officials said.

Search dogs found a victim farther downstream, the fire department said.


Comment: Foxweather.com reports:
[...]

San Antonio recorded 6.11 inches of rain, making it the second-wettest June day on record in 12 years.

The half-foot of rain also nearly doubles the previous daily record of 3.26 inches set back in 1973 and made Thursday the 10th-wettest day ever recorded at San Antonio International Airport.

[...]
Update June 14

IrishStar.com reports:
The death toll from the heavy rains that swept through parts of San Antonio, Texas, has climbed to 13, with all missing persons now accounted for, according to authorities on Saturday.

Over 7 inches (18 centimeters) of rain fell within a few hours on Thursday, leading to rapidly rising floodwaters that swept more than a dozen cars into a creek.

Some individuals managed to escape by climbing trees. Firefighters across the nation's seventh-largest city carried out over 70 rescues.



Lightning

Lightning kills 13 goats in Mugu, Nepal

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© Hari Krishna Aidi/TRN
Thirteen goats have been killed due to lightning at Jantalaina of Jhyari Gaun of Chhayanath Rara Municipality -8 in Mugu on Thursday.

Municipality ward number 8 Chair Karna Bahadur Rawal informed that lightning killed 13 goats of Ganesh Rawal and Banchurup Rawal at the pasture land on Thursday. (RSS)

Tsunami

Widespread flooding throughout Trinidad and Tobago

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WIDESPREAD flooding hit Trinidad and Tobago by noon yesterday, following heavy rainfall from Tuesday night which had already been preceded by frequent showers from the weekend. And a forecast for persistent, heavy rainfall has triggered an extended adverse weather alert until 4 p.m. today, as well as warnings that vulnerable communities brace for possible flooding.

Yesterday's downpour began before midday and was persistent in some areas of North and South Trinidad.

By noon, flooding was reported in Penal and by 1 p.m., the South-West Regional Health Authority took the decision to close the Rock Road Health Centre. However, the water had receded by mid-afternoon, which the corporation attributed to earlier mitigation works.

Some flooding was also reported in the San Francique area, and San Fernando and environs.

By yesterday evening, street flooding was impacting Coal Mine, Sangre Grande, as several streams overtopped. Flooding also hit the Manzanilla Mayaro Road and parts of Plum Mitan.

Flash flooding brought commercial and other daily activities to a near halt in parts of Malabar and Arima, also causing massive commuter pile-ups until late evening.


Cassiopaea

Supernovae may have kicked off abrupt climate shifts in the past, and they could again

Supernova & Climate Change
© University of Colorado BoulderThe Vela supernova remnant, the remains of a supernova explosion 800 light-years from Earth in the southern constellation Vela, as seen from the Dark Energy Camera on the Víctor M. Blanco Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory.
When a star explodes, it sends high-energy particles out in all directions. This burst of energy can travel through space
Robert Brak.enridge
© University of Colorado BoulderRobert Brakenridge.
for thousands of light-years, traversing solar systems and even galaxies.

In a recent paper, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, INSTAAR senior research associate Robert Brakenridge argues that supernovae may be the key to understanding a series of abrupt climate shifts in recent geologic history. The analysis models how such radiation could collide with Earth's atmosphere, changing its composition. Brakenridge also matches a number of known supernovae to climate shifts preserved in geologic records.

"We have abrupt environmental changes in Earth's history. That's solid, we see these changes," Brakenridge said. "So, what caused them?"

Brakenridge says that, if nearby supernovae caused such changes, further research could help scientists predict similar events in the future and prepare accordingly.

"When nearby supernovae occur in the future, the radiation could have a pretty dramatic effect on human society," he said. "We have to find out if indeed they caused environmental changes in the past."

Brakenridge's recent paper is actually one of many he and others have published on the topic since the 1980s. But, in the past, the idea has rested mainly in the realm of theoretical physics. Brakenridge's new publication is an effort to link the theory to empirical observations, both in space and here on Earth.

Tsunami

Massive flooding hits Cagayan de Oro City in the Philippines

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© Fernel Advincula
Several areas in Cagayan de Oro City were hit by a flash flood following heavy rains on Tuesday, June 10, 2025.

The intense downpour triggered flooding in various barangays, submerging houses and stranding motorists.

A video captured by a netizen shows floodwaters surging through the streets at the Crossing Bolonsiri in Barangay Camaman-an.

Some vehicles were also seen being swept away by floodwaters. Other vehicles were also submerged.

The City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Department (CDRRMD) immediately deployed personnel to respond to the affected areas.

Residents in the low-lying areas were also evacuated. They eventually returned to their homes when the floodwaters subsided later in the evening.


Lightning

Golfer struck and killed by lightning, another injured in Gunter, Texas

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A lightning strike hit two men on a golf course in Texas Sunday afternoon, killing one of them.

A man told News 12 he was with his wife nearly 150 yards away from a family of three men and a child on the course at The Bridges Golf Club.

The eyewitness said a lightning strike hit two of the men, one in his 70s who appeared to be severely burned from his head to chest and had no pulse for 20 to 30 minutes.

He went on to say another man, who appeared to be in his 40s, was also struck and put into an ambulance, but looked alert.

The witness said he felt the static charge hit his arm and was riding with his wife, who still has lasting "tingling sensations."

"It was a terrible sight to see, and I wish it upon nobody," the eyewitness said.

Police said both men were taken to the hospital, but one of the men died from his injuries.