Milton was initially set as a category one storm when forecasters first raised the alarm over the weekend after it battered Mexico with powerful gusts and floods.

But its intensity has only increased since then, with officials overnight declaring Milton had become a category five storm that could see potential wind speeds up to a stunning 165mph wreak havoc in Tampa.

Milton, which is set to make landfall later today, comes just two weeks after Hurricane Helene battered Florida and blazed a trail of destruction as far inland as the Appalachian mountains, leaving some 230 people dead.

Helene roared into the Florida coastline as a Category 4 storm on September 26 and carved a path of destruction inland, dumping torrential rainfall and flash flooding on remote towns in states such as North Carolina.

That storm was the deadliest natural disaster to hit the United States since 2005’s Hurricane Katrina – but many fear that Milton will be yet more destructive.

Hurricane expert Michael Lowry warned that in the Tampa area, home to about three million people, Milton’s storm surge ‘could double the storm surge levels observed two weeks ago during Helene’.

In an unsettling assessment, the National Hurricane Centre in Miami said yesterday: ‘Milton has the potential to be one of the most destructive hurricanes on record for west-central Florida.

‘Milton is still a relatively compact hurricane, but the wind field is expected to continue to grow in size as it approaches Florida.

‘In fact, the official forecast shows the hurricane and tropical-storm-force winds roughly doubling in size by the time it makes landfall.’

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis expanded his state of emergency declaration on Sunday to 51 counties and said Floridians should prepare for more power outages and disruption, making sure they have a week’s worth of food and water and are ready to hit the road.

DeSantis at a news conference last night ticked off town after town in danger, saying: ‘Basically the entire peninsula portion of Florida is under some type of either a watch or a warning.’

Meanwhile, several municipalities across Florida have announced curfews for people remaining while Hurricane Milton hits the state.

Ahead of expected landfall of Hurricane Milton, a heavy stream of evacuation traffic slowly moves southward from North-West Florida on Interstate 75

+59
View gallery

Ahead of expected landfall of Hurricane Milton, a heavy stream of evacuation traffic slowly moves southward from North-West Florida on Interstate 75

Mike and Bre, who say they are homeless, take shelter from the storm in a car park as Hurricane Milton approaches on October 08, 2024 in Tampa, Florida

+59
View gallery

Mike and Bre, who say they are homeless, take shelter from the storm in a car park as Hurricane Milton approaches on October 08, 2024 in Tampa, Florida

Ahead of expected landfall of Hurricane Milton, a heavy stream of evacuation traffic slowly moves southward from North-West Florida on Interstate 75, in in Naples, Florida

+59
View gallery

Ahead of expected landfall of Hurricane Milton, a heavy stream of evacuation traffic slowly moves southward from North-West Florida on Interstate 75, in in Naples, Florida

NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick captured this view of Hurricane Milton as the International Space Station transited above Hurricane Milton as it approaches the west coast of Florida

+59
View gallery

NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick captured this view of Hurricane Milton as the International Space Station transited above Hurricane Milton as it approaches the west coast of Florida

People line up in their cars for fuel at a gas station ahead of Hurricane Milton's expected landfall in Lakeland, Florida

+59
View gallery

People line up in their cars for fuel at a gas station ahead of Hurricane Milton’s expected landfall in Lakeland, Florida

People fill up gas containers at a station ahead of Hurricane Milton's expected landfall in Lakeland, Florida

+59
View gallery

People fill up gas containers at a station ahead of Hurricane Milton’s expected landfall in Lakeland, Florida

Two people ride their motorcycles on a flooded street after the passage of Hurricane Milton, in Celestun, Mexico, 08 October 2024

+59
View gallery

Two people ride their motorcycles on a flooded street after the passage of Hurricane Milton, in Celestun, Mexico, 08 October 2024

In Fort Myers Beach, a 24-hour daily general curfew began at 10pm on Tuesday night.

Read More

Incredible NASA time-lapse video taken from ABOVE the eye of monster Hurricane Milton

article image

The city of Naples will begin a ‘vehicle curfew’ starting at 4pm today; the island of Sanibel in Lee County will launch its curfew at 10pm today; and in Flagler County, a curfew will last at least 12 hours, from Wednesday at 7pm to Thursday at 7am.

It expanded yesterday morning as it hurtled over the Gulf of Mexico towards Tampa – making it potentially ‘one of the most destructive hurricanes on record’ for west-central Florida, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The hurricane’s winds are becoming more wide-reaching from the centre of the storm – vastly increasing its capacity to cause destruction.

Milton’s gales extended around 80 miles from the eye of the storm through Monday, and this increased to just over 100 miles by Wednesday morning.

But the warnings of Milton’s destructive power have only grown more alarming over the course of the week with local officials scrambling to evacuate the population before the tempest hits Tampa and St Petersburg some time this evening.

Residents walk along the pier damaged by Hurricane Milton on the coast of Puerto Progeso, Yucatan State, Mexico, on October 8, 2024

+59
View gallery

Residents walk along the pier damaged by Hurricane Milton on the coast of Puerto Progeso, Yucatan State, Mexico, on October 8, 2024

A car sits half-buried in sand as Bradenton Beach, Florida, which was in the process of cleaning up after Hurricane Helene, as Hurricane Milton approaches

+59
View gallery

A car sits half-buried in sand as Bradenton Beach, Florida, which was in the process of cleaning up after Hurricane Helene, as Hurricane Milton approaches

The state is holding its breath as category-5 Hurricane Milton is set to devastate the Tampa region tomorrow with 15-foot floods and 165miles per hour winds laying waste to the city

+59
View gallery

The state is holding its breath as category-5 Hurricane Milton is set to devastate the Tampa region tomorrow with 15-foot floods and 165miles per hour winds laying waste to the city

Drivers last night queued in standstill traffic as the state’s major highways were clogged with miles-long lines of cars trying to flee the line of danger.

In a scene of frantic preparation repeated all over Florida, dozens of cars lined up at a sports facility in Tampa to pick up sandbags to protect their homes from flooding yesterday.

John Gomez, 75, ignored official advice and traveled all the way from Chicago to try to save a second house he has in Florida.

‘I think it’s better to be here in case something happens,’ Gomez said as he waited in line.

But Katie, in her 30s, heeded the call to evacuate and arrived in Orlando with her five-year-old son and dog from St. Petersburg, a coastal city where Hurricane Helene had brought three feet of floodwater into her bayside home two weeks ago.

Normally she would ride out the storm at a friend’s elevated apartment, ‘but I’m not taking any chances this time around,’ she said.

The window has also closed for people to escape the region by plane as airports in Tampa, St Petersburg and Orlando shut down and grounded flights. Thousands of British tourists are now battling hurricane chaos as Milton threatens to devastate much of the gulf coast.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) said earlier this week it was coordinating its response to the Hurricane with governor DeSantis and briefed President Joe Biden on how it has staged lifesaving resources.

FEMA has prepared 20million meals and 40million litres of water at the ready, as they prepare to deploy them after the hurricane hits.

‘I highly encourage you to evacuate’ if you’re in an evacuation zone, said Kevin Guthrie, executive director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, yesterday. ‘We are preparing… for the largest evacuation that we have seen, most likely since 2017, Hurricane Irma.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said though it remains unclear exactly where Milton will strike, ‘I don’t think there’s any scenario where we don’t have major impacts at this point.’

School districts have closed, businesses have shut and evacuation orders have seen residents fleeing the coast, as weather officials warn the tempest could be one of the most destructive hurricanes on record

+59
View gallery

School districts have closed, businesses have shut and evacuation orders have seen residents fleeing the coast, as weather officials warn the tempest could be one of the most destructive hurricanes on record

"Pray for Orlando" reads on wood that was placed at a Home Depot before the arrival of Hurricane Milton, in Orlando, Florida

+59
View gallery

‘Pray for Orlando’ reads on wood that was placed at a Home Depot before the arrival of Hurricane Milton, in Orlando, Florida

People board up windows as the old town of Ybor City in Tampa stands mostly empty as the state prepares for the arrival of Hurricane Milton

+59
View gallery

People board up windows as the old town of Ybor City in Tampa stands mostly empty as the state prepares for the arrival of Hurricane Milton

Forecasters warn Milton is 'expected to grow in size' and remain 'an extremely dangerous hurricane' when it makes landfall in the US tomorrow

+59
View gallery

Forecasters warn Milton is ‘expected to grow in size’ and remain ‘an extremely dangerous hurricane’ when it makes landfall in the US tomorrow

Some residents, who despite the desperate calls to evacuate either chose to remain in place or could not flee, are hunkering down after sprees of panic buying  stripped store shelves of bottled water, toilet paper and other household necessities.

Read More

Brits are warned to stay at home by angry Florida residents as Hurricane Milton threatens the US

article image

Home owners are already on the guard against thieves – with one sign in New Port Richey, just north of Tampa on Florida’s Gulf Coast, emblazoned with: ‘You loot, we shoot on sight’.

Milton was so strong on Monday night that experts called for it to be given unprecedented Category 6 status, however the hurricane was downgraded to a Category 5 early this morning.

Forecasters warn Milton is ‘expected to grow in size’ and remain ‘an extremely dangerous hurricane’ when it makes landfall on Wednesday.

Those who are still desperate to escape and follow evacuation orders said it may be too ‘dangerous’ to hit the roads because local gas stations have run out of fuel.

However, Governor Ron DeSantis assured residents that there’s enough fuel for them to get away from the storm.

People prepare sandbags ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton, in Orlando, Florida

+59
View gallery

People prepare sandbags ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton, in Orlando, Florida

A member of the Mexican army stands in floodwaters after Hurricane Milton brought heavy rain to Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on its way to Florida, in Celestun, Mexico

+59
View gallery

A member of the Mexican army stands in floodwaters after Hurricane Milton brought heavy rain to Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on its way to Florida, in Celestun, Mexico

Palm trees hitting by strong winds are seen caused by rains from Hurricane Milton in Puerto Progeso, Yucatan State, Mexico

+59
View gallery

Palm trees hitting by strong winds are seen caused by rains from Hurricane Milton in Puerto Progeso, Yucatan State, Mexico

Governor Joaquin Diaz Mena of Yucatan state walks through floodwaters after Hurricane Milton brought heavy rain to Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula

+59
View gallery

Governor Joaquin Diaz Mena of Yucatan state walks through floodwaters after Hurricane Milton brought heavy rain to Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula

A woman carrying a child walks through floodwaters after Hurricane Milton brought heavy rain to Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on its way to Florida

+59
View gallery

A woman carrying a child walks through floodwaters after Hurricane Milton brought heavy rain to Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on its way to Florida

Boats are secured in the overflow of a river after Hurricane Milton hit Celestun, Mexico with heavy rain on its way to Florida

+59
View gallery

Boats are secured in the overflow of a river after Hurricane Milton hit Celestun, Mexico with heavy rain on its way to Florida

Last night, a terrifying simulation laid bare what is expected to happen when Hurricane Milton strikes Florida.

Animated footage revealed the horrifying destruction Milton could wreak with as much as 15 feet of water predicted in some areas – taller than a double decker bus.

Broadcast on The Weather Channel, the brown surge of the flood could be seen rising to twice the height of presenter Stephanie Abrams.

Read More

Moment people have to be airlifted off cruise ship stuck off coast of Florida as hurricane sweeps in

article image

Commentating on the impending disaster, she said: ‘At this level the first floors of structures are completely flooded and there are few places that it is safe when the water rises this high.

‘We want everyone to know their evacuation zone, listen to local officials and evacuate when ordered to do so. This is not just a calm water – you’re going to have waves and even whitecaps on the surge inland.’

The camera then continued to pan over the scene, which saw buildings carried off in the raging turbulence of the flood, as the water topped the tropical palm trees. Dustbins and logs floated on the surface.

Meteorologist Jordan Steele added: ‘It’s going to be nasty. Trying to think you could walk in it – please do not think that.

‘This thing will carry you away, especially when we’ve got the forecast that it could go up to 15 feet.’

Broadcast on The Weather Channel, the brown surge of the flood can be seen rising to almost twice the height of presenter Stephanie Abrams

+59
View gallery

Broadcast on The Weather Channel, the brown surge of the flood can be seen rising to almost twice the height of presenter Stephanie Abrams

I-75 northbound lanes near mile marker 354 as of 9:15 a.m. on Tuesday, October 8

+59
View gallery

I-75 northbound lanes near mile marker 354 as of 9:15 a.m. on Tuesday, October 8

A threatening sign warns looters on a garage door taped with plastic and sand bags in preparation for Hurricane Milton

+59
View gallery

A threatening sign warns looters on a garage door taped with plastic and sand bags in preparation for Hurricane Milton

Vehicles fill the road as they drive to the East on I-75 from the West coast of Florida before the arrival of Hurricane Milton

+59
View gallery

Vehicles fill the road as they drive to the East on I-75 from the West coast of Florida before the arrival of Hurricane Milton

The Aquatics Division of the City of Tampa Parks and Recreation Department with about 20 volunteers and local community members served over 2,000 sandbags to over 200 Tampa residents ahead of Hurricane Milton

+59
View gallery

The Aquatics Division of the City of Tampa Parks and Recreation Department with about 20 volunteers and local community members served over 2,000 sandbags to over 200 Tampa residents ahead of Hurricane Milton

Contractors haul away debris left by Hurricane Helene along the roadside, as residents in New Port Richey prepare to evacuate ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton, Florida

+59
View gallery

Contractors haul away debris left by Hurricane Helene along the roadside, as residents in New Port Richey prepare to evacuate ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton, Florida

A contractor walks by debris left by Hurricane Helene along the roadside, as residents prepare to evacuate ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

+59
View gallery

A contractor walks by debris left by Hurricane Helene along the roadside, as residents prepare to evacuate ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

A closed business is seen after Hurricane Helene ahead of Hurricane Milton's arrival in Treasure Island, Florida

+59
View gallery

 A closed business is seen after Hurricane Helene ahead of Hurricane Milton’s arrival in Treasure Island, Florida

Lightening strikes over Cancun as Hurricane Milton rolls through Mexico today

+59
View gallery

Lightening strikes over Cancun as Hurricane Milton rolls through Mexico today

The storm centre is expected to come ashore Wednesday night in the Tampa Bay area, which has not endured a direct hit by a major hurricane in more than a century.

Locals took to social media, detailing their fears as they struggle to evacuate from communities located in Milton’s expected direct path.

Read More

Hurricane Milton interactive tracker reveals devastating path as it barrels toward Florida

article image

Sharing drone footage of clogged traffic along I-75 between Morris Bridge and Bruce B Downs on Monday, one X user said: ‘This is why a lot of people are staying behind, at a certain point traffic is so bad you cannot get out of Florida, or there’s no gas. So you’re stuck outside of Gainesville.’

One woman, whose son lives in Hernando County, said that he is trapped.

‘Everywhere is out of gas and roads are too backed up for him to [evacuate],’ she tweeted. ‘He has family in Georgia but can’t get there. This is scary. He is scared. I am terrified for him.’

The concerned mother added that her son’s community was also among those flooded by Hurricane Helene last week.

She said: ‘Now Milton is heading for them.’

But DeSantis tried to ease fears yesterday morning, saying during a press conference: ‘There is no fuel shortage. Fuel continues to arrive in the state of Florida.’

Residents were seen at Costco in Orlando stocking up on bottled water, paper towels, toilet paper and other essentials ahead of Hurricane Milton's arrival

+59
View gallery

Residents were seen at Costco in Orlando stocking up on bottled water, paper towels, toilet paper and other essentials ahead of Hurricane Milton’s arrival

Floridians have posted 'fuel updates' on social media, alerting their neighbors where gas is still available in the community

+59
View gallery
A resident this morning revealed that in Port Charlotte, Florida, 'some gas stations are out of fuel' but that they were able to get gas at Wawa

+59
View gallery

Floridians have posted ‘fuel updates’ on social media, alerting their neighbors where gas is still available in the community. A resident this morning revealed that in Port Charlotte, Florida, ‘some gas stations are out of fuel’ but that they were able to get gas at Wawa

Clara Chapman, a longtime resident, prepares to evacuate from her home ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

+59
View gallery

Clara Chapman, a longtime resident, prepares to evacuate from her home ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

Michael Mims boards up his home in advance of Hurricane Milton in Fort Myers, Florida

+59
View gallery

Michael Mims boards up his home in advance of Hurricane Milton in Fort Myers, Florida

Sandra White prepares to evacuate from her home with her partner Scott Pepperman, and their dog Buoy ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

+59
View gallery

Sandra White prepares to evacuate from her home with her partner Scott Pepperman, and their dog Buoy ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

A sign on a home lists hurricane names as they board up windows in preparation for Hurricane Milton

+59
View gallery

A sign on a home lists hurricane names as they board up windows in preparation for Hurricane Milton

Scott Pepperman (L), and his son Cobi move a trailer while preparing to evacuate from their home ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

+59
View gallery

Scott Pepperman (L), and his son Cobi move a trailer while preparing to evacuate from their home ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

Cobi Pepperman helps his father load belongings in a U-Haul truck while preparing to evacuate from their home ahead of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

+59
View gallery

Cobi Pepperman helps his father load belongings in a U-Haul truck while preparing to evacuate from their home ahead of Hurricane Milton in New Port Richey, Florida

People evacuate ahead of Hurricane Milton's expected mid-week landfall in Sanford, Florida

+59
View gallery

People evacuate ahead of Hurricane Milton’s expected mid-week landfall in Sanford, Florida

Vehicles fill the road as they drive to the East on I-75 from the West coast of Florida before the arrival of Hurricane Milton in Big Cypress, Florida

+59
View gallery

Vehicles fill the road as they drive to the East on I-75 from the West coast of Florida before the arrival of Hurricane Milton in Big Cypress, Florida

Hurricane Milton, currently a catastrophic Category 4 hurricane with winds of 155 mph, continues to churn across the Gulf of Mexico heading for Florida, shown on the GOES-East satellite at 10:09 GMT, October 8, 2024

+59
View gallery

Hurricane Milton, currently a catastrophic Category 4 hurricane with winds of 155 mph, continues to churn across the Gulf of Mexico heading for Florida, shown on the GOES-East satellite at 10:09 GMT, October 8, 2024

Milton is creeping towards Florida, sucking energy from the Gulf of Mexico's warm water

+59
View gallery

Milton is creeping towards Florida, sucking energy from the Gulf of Mexico’s warm water

Milton is creeping towards Florida, sucking energy from the Gulf of Mexico's warm water

+59
View gallery

Milton is creeping towards Florida, sucking energy from the Gulf of Mexico’s warm water

Despite the long lines at gas stations, DeSantis said officials are working with fuel companies to continue bringing in gasoline.

‘You do not have to get on the interstate and go far away,’ he added. ‘You can evacuate tens of miles; you do not have to evacuate hundreds of miles away. You do have options.’

Read More

Florida and Georgia hotels raise prices from $95 to $700-a-NIGHT as Hurricane Milton evacuees flee

article image

He added that Florida has helped evacuate more than 200 health care facilities in Milton’s path and that 36 county-run shelters are open.

Still, multiple people have also shared anecdotes on X detailing their fears and claiming they are unable to afford the cost of either driving or flying their way out of the state.

‘I’ve had two people in the last HOUR tell me they can’t afford to evacuate for Hurricane Milton. Never tell me low wages aren’t violent ever again,’ one user on X posted yesterday.

A Sarasota resident also claimed they were struggling to get out of the storm’s way.

‘I live in Sarasota, which is in the direct path of Hurricane Milton. They are evacuating my town, but there is no gas left to evacuate, and traffic is so bad that it could be more dangerous to try and evacuate at this point. What would you do if you were me?’

DeSantis said the state would activate 8,000 National Guard members and is positioning truckloads of supplies and equipment near the area where the storm is expected to make landfall.

Residents have been warned to 'flee or die' as Hurricane Milton closes in

+59
View gallery

Residents have been warned to ‘flee or die’ as Hurricane Milton closes in

Seagulls fly on the beach as Hurricane Milton advances past Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula on its way to Florida, in Cancun, Mexico

+59
View gallery

Seagulls fly on the beach as Hurricane Milton advances past Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on its way to Florida, in Cancun, Mexico

A man walks through floodwaters after Hurricane Milton caused huge rains as it hit Mexico on its wait to the US

+59
View gallery

A man walks through floodwaters after Hurricane Milton caused huge rains as it hit Mexico on its wait to the US

Almost the entirety of Florida's west coast is under hurricane warning this morning as Milton and its 155mph winds creep toward the state

+59
View gallery

Almost the entirety of Florida’s west coast is under hurricane warning this morning as Milton and its 155mph winds creep toward the state

Tampa’s airport closed indefinitely from 9am Tuesday, meaning residents can no longer evacuate by plane. The airport posted on X that it is not a shelter for people or their cars.

St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport said it is in a mandatory evacuation zone and will close after the last flight leaves today.

Delta Air Lines ran out of flights from Tampa to Atlanta at 10.30am Monday, with customers having to pay more than $800 for a roundabout flight to Washington DC instead.

Meanwhile, American Airlines was selling flights from Tampa to Atlanta on Monday for between $641 and $2,400, with only a couple of seats remaining on each plane.

Florida is a popular destination for UK tourists, with over a million typically travelling there annual for attractions including Disney World.

Universal’s Orlando Resort has cancelled a number of events over the coming week – with Volcano Bay closed tomorrow and on Thursday, alongside the Halloween Horror Nights. Their hotels intend to remain fully operational. SeaWorld Orlando also said it would close on Wednesday and Thursday.

The theme parks join Orlando International Airport, which said it would cease operations Wednesday morning. The airport is the nation’s seventh busiest and Florida’s most trafficked.

Walt Disney World will close on Wednesday in phases starting from 1pm. The theme parks will remain closed until Thursday, when there will be the potential of some reopening in the afternoon.

The Orlando area is the most visited destination in the United States due to Disney World, Universal Orlando Resort and other theme parks, attracting 74 million tourists last year alone.

October is also among the busier times for theme parks because of Halloween-related celebrations, which have become major money generators over the past couple decades. Universal Orlando hosts ‘Halloween Horror Nights,’ with ghoulish haunted houses based on slasher films and other pop culture horror, and Disney has its tamer ‘Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party.’

While Disney rarely shuts its doors – save for dangerous hurricanes in recent years, the COVID-19 pandemic and the September 11 attacks – its hotels are often havens for coastal residents fleeing impending storms. A check of Disney World’s online reservation system on Tuesday morning showed no vacancies.

Those lucky enough to get a hotel reservation have gotten unexpected treats during past storms. During Hurricane Irma in 2017, guests at a hotel on Disney property found themselves stranded with actress Kristen Bell, who voiced the role of Anna in the beloved Disney film, ‘Frozen.’ While in Orlando, the actress found time to sing songs for evacuees at a nearby hurricane shelter.

Once a hurricane passes, the theme parks try to return operations to normal as quickly as possible. After Hurricane Charley charted a devastating path through Orlando in 2004, Disney World had utility vehicles picking up downed tree limbs and clearing roads on its property within an hour in the pitch-dark night.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has urged Brits to flee, as they say they are monitoring the weather system. An spokesperson said: ‘We are closely monitoring the development of Hurricane Milton towards the United States. We urge all British nationals in Florida or travelling to the region to follow travel advice and guidance from local authorities.’

British tourists have been warned to stay at home by furious Florida residents as the hurricane approaches – with desperate locals branding travelers ‘selfish’ amid ‘flee or die’ warnings that have forced them to evacuate their homes.

One couple from Essex, who say they ‘love anything Disney and Universal’, said that they were going to brave the ‘worrying’ flight from Heathrow during a hurricane. They added that they had ‘taken all cautions that needed to be taken’.

But Floridians reacted in fury towards Dan and Terry, who said they would be vlogging their 16-day adventure.

Caley Kennedy, said: ‘I would not recommend coming right now. We’ve got our own people to worry about.’

Another, Erin Dowding, replied in capitals – saying: ‘DO NOT COME.’

She continued: Why would you come into a devastating hurricane that is going to do so much damage in our state and expect us to shelter tourists and then accommodate them after.

‘Just wait a week and see if it’s ok to come. Selfish.’

786 Comments

5.2K Viewing

Comments are subject to our House Rules

5 People typing

View 12 new comments

Sort by 

  • Leamington Spa, United Kingdom

    I was in a hurricane about 30 years ago in Florida and what I remember most was the eerie calm before the storm. It was so still and it felt illogical that a storm was coming. I really hope this isn’…

    See more

    8

    • Bristol, United Kingdom
      I and my husband and children were unable to leave when Hurricane Andrew was on the way when we were on holiday in Florida years ago, because the roads were too blocked with traffic. As you say, the a…See more

      1

  • Yorkshire, United Kingdom
    Wonder how many of those fleeing Florida have electric cars? If the electric has been cut off, and / or the cars are stuck in traffic, there could be problems, such as roads being blocked by EVs out …See more

    13

    • At the bottom of a Pothole., United Kingdom

      Eyup…i said that same thing a while ago, same scenario on our motorways, middle of winter, stuck for hours in miles of stationary traffic due to some event … heaters and lights on amounts to mile…

      See more

      3