Weaponized Hurricanes Helene and Milton: Is Hurricane Milton the Most Suspicious Storm Ever?

Texans Jack and Dodie, Clever Journeys, 10/24

What are the Suspicious Blue Balls Found on the Ground After Storms?

Hurricanes have hit Gulf Coast states every year since 2016, but a growing number of people believe there is something strange and peculiar about Hurricane Milton on it’s way to Florida from the opposite direction of history.

The top video below is a brief one and the bottom one is more detailed. It is a must watch.

“There’s little precedent for hurricanes striking the Florida Gulf Coast in October on an east-northeast approach, which indicates the shearing influence of mid-latitude weather,” says,”  Dr. Ryan Truchelut the chief meteorologist at WeatherTiger, a Tallahassee company providing forensic meteorology expert witness services.

“Most late-season Florida threats that developed in the southern Gulf hit as tropical storms or non-tropical lows,” Dr. Truchelut observed.  “However, there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in climatology, and as we’ve learned once again in the past couple of weeks, the events of our weather past do not constrain the threats of the future. And the forecast indicates history won’t save us this time.”

“History also shows that Florida’s late-season hurricane risks remain high into late October, shifting south with time.”

“In the Atlantic region, hurricanes form anywhere from the tropical central Atlantic to the Gulf of Mexico,” explains Kerry Emanuel in the Center for Meteorology and Physical Oceanography at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  “Those that form in the central Atlantic and Caribbean region usually start off moving westward; when they recurve, they may strike the North American mainland. Some of the storms that begin in the Gulf of Mexico may move poleward and eastward right from their inception.”

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