H. Michael Mogil's Lifelong Learning Blog

    • About Mike and this blog
    • contact us
    • how the weatherworks
Skip to content
bg
bg
bg
bg

Tag Archives: rip current

Lots of Weather Hazards Today in SW Florida (H. Michael Mogil, CCM, CBM, NWA-DS*)

A line of heavy thunderstorms is currently (8:45 a.m. E.S.T.) approaching southwest Florida.  Ahead of this line, several isolated strong storms have developed, some of which have shown signs of becoming severe and/or tornadic.  One such storm passed by Cape Coral about an hour ago and is racing rapidly to

Read Details

Fiona fades; Gaston grows; but there is another tropical system (99L) on Florida’s horizon… (H. Michael Mogil, CCM, CBM, DMS)

Fiona (the sixth Atlantic tropical cyclone of the 2016 season) recently passed. In her wake, Gaston briefly reached hurricane strength far out in the Atlantic. Another tropical system (99L) near the Bahamas is still showing signs of intensifying this weekend as it approaches the Florida Straits. And, more African waves

Read Details

THEWEATHERMOGIL:: More stormy times followed by chilly weather for southwest Florida

With a potentially crippling snowstorm/blizzard set to affect the mid-Atlantic states today and Saturday, it would be easy to lose a local focus. However, since I am slated to give a weather talk at the Friends of Barefoot Beach Lecture Series tomorrow (Jan. 23, 2016), keeping atop of local conditions

Read Details

THEWEATHERMOGIL:: Stormy times for southwest Florida

The first in a series of storm systems and strong cold fronts will be affecting southwest Florida today (Jan. 15, 2015). Heavy showers and thunderstorms, a few of which may turn severe, are on the menu. While this mainly includes strong, gusty thunderstorm winds (up to 60 miles per hour),

Read Details

A new perspective on ocean and lake currents

For the past few days, Hurricane (now extra-tropical storm) Arthur brought concerns to East Coast residents about storm surge and rip currents. Today, Jul. 6, 2014, the focus shifts to the eastern and western shores of Lake Michigan where an array of wind-driven currents could create problems for boaters, swimmers

Read Details

H. Michael Mogil's Lifelong Learning Blog

Top