Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumS. Florida Rainfall Totals From Eta May Hit 23"; Storm Track Now Looks Like Panhandle/MS By Saturday
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. Tropical Storm Eta was squatting off western Cuba on Tuesday after drifting away from South Florida, where it unleashed a deluge that flooded entire neighborhoods and filled some homes with rising water. The 28th named storm of a record hurricane season was the first this year to make landfall in Florida. And now a 29th named storm has formed over the northern Atlantic: Theta took shape Monday night, eclipsing the record set in 2005, when Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma struck the Gulf Coast.
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The rain also kept falling Tuesday in South Florida, where as much as 23 inches were expected to accumulate. Eta barely hit land late Sunday as it blew over Lower Matecumbe Key on its way into the Gulf of Mexico, but dumped water over densely populated neighborhoods from Monroe to Palm Beach counties.
People in Florida are very familiar with the heavy tropical rain that falls like clockwork on summer afternoons. This was something else a 100-year rain event, Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis called it. Once the ground becomes saturated, theres really no place for the water to go, Trantalis said.
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"Its very bad. In the last 20 years, I've never seen anything like that," said Tito Carvalho, who owns a car stereo business in Fort Lauderdale and estimated the water was 3 feet (about a meter) deep in some places. Some items in his business were damaged from the flooding, he added. Firefighters pulled a person from a car that had driven into a canal Sunday night in Lauderhill, north of Miami. The patient was hospitalized in critical condition, authorities said. And a tractor-trailer was left dangling off the elevated Palmetto Expressway in Miami, the Florida Highway Patrol said, after the driver lost control.
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https://www.startribune.com/florida-cities-mop-up-after-deluge-from-tropical-storm-eta/573024691/
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Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)Our driveway looked like a shallow river all the way down the street. But we were lucky, we live out west so we didn't get hit as hard as those out east - their roads were flooded with water as high as three feet!
Chainfire
(17,530 posts)I lived in that part of Florida for a while. It is only a few feet above sea level, flat as a pancake and most of it is covered in asphalt or concrete.
We could use some rain, in North Florida, but not in that kind of volume. I am glad to see it won't be a wind event. I am still cleaning up from Michael from two years ago. That one was was a bugger and it knocked down 65% of the trees on my (formerly) heavy wooded property.
hatrack
(59,583 posts)Not terribly powerful, but a storm that just sits there and rains and rains and rains.
soothsayer
(38,601 posts)Link to tweet
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The Daily Progress
@DailyProgress
Scenes from Tropical Storm Eta, which unleashed a deluge that flooded entire neighborhoods in South Florida and filled some homes with rising water.
Photos: Florida cities mop up after deluge, flooding from Tropical Storm Eta
dailyprogress.com
https://t.co/uddgfxayIo?amp=1