So starting to review the aftermath, and from what i can tell, from footage, news highlights etc (and I may be corrected if news comes in) that this really has been nothing more than a sub par hurricane. It was already breaking apart way before landfall in fact, it seems the most dangerous part of the storm was the storms in front of the hurricane, maybe the outer bands (what was left of them) bringing lots of tornadoes.
Im saying this with a comparison of what that area of the world is used to in terms of hurricanes. Rainfall amounts were expected to be 10cm-15cm widely with some areas seeing up to 30cm... by hurricane standards, thats not that much. It would be interesting to see what volumes actually fell as the Radar looked mostly dry for the south of florida
The area is used to tropical thunderstorms that quite happily drop large volumes in short periods. By comparison, the typhoon that hit Asia the other week was expected to drop almost a metre of rain to some parts.
I can see a sport stadium roof has been lost, but apart from typical windy destruction (luckily) i think florida has probably escaped a catastrophe, and that reality was, the media and governments were responding to how Milton revved up way out at sea, rather than the forecast that was for a weakened if not dying storm event.. the latter is what played out.
Originally Posted by: Russwirral