Far from where Hurricane Milton hit, tornadoes wrought unexpected damage
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[October 12, 2024]
By STEPHANY MATAT and CHRISTOPHER L. KELLER
WELLINGTON, Fla. (AP) — Tony Brazzale, a diving boat captain who has
lived for 10 years in his Wellington home in southeastern Florida,
wasn't worried about Hurricane Milton. The storm's center was forecast
to make landfall on the opposite side of the peninsula and then cross
the state well to the north of his family.
But on Wednesday afternoon as the hurricane began to pummel the state,
he stood outside his house and watched as a tornado loomed in the sky.
He took video on his phone. The pressure dropped, and his wife said her
ears were popping. It was time to go inside.
The twister shattered windows in the home, tore off roof shingles,
ripped a tree from the ground and left branches and other debris
scattered in the yard. Two days later Brazzale was wearing safety
goggles and using a chainsaw as he cleaned up the damage.
“The hurricane was a nonevent for us,” he said. “Had it not been for an
F-3 tornado, the entire thing would have been a nonevent for us.”
It was one of dozens of tornadoes spawned by Milton that hit South
Florida far from where the storm made landfall near Sarasota. One of
them killed at least six people in Spanish Lakes Country Club Village
near Fort Pierce, about an hour's drive north from Wellington.
Meteorologists believe there may have been at least 38 tornadoes
associated with Milton. The National Weather Service is still reviewing
preliminary reports, which could take weeks, but it issued 126 tornado
warnings in the state the day the hurricane hit.
When the review is complete, the storm could crack the all-time top-10
list for most tornadoes caused by a hurricane.
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Tony Brazzale removes part of a tree felled by a tornado from in
front of his house in Wellington, Fla., Friday, Oct. 11, 2024. (AP
Photo/Stephany Matat)
The highest number of confirmed tornadoes from a hurricane were the
118 unleashed by Ivan in 2004, according to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration. Hurricane Beryl, which hit in July of
this year and is still under review, generated at least 65 confirmed
tornadoes and currently ranks fifth.
By comparison, Florida overall typically sees about 50 tornadoes a
year on average, according to Matthew Elliot, a warning coordination
meteorologist for the Storm Prediction Center.
In Wellington, 210 miles (340 kilometers) southeast of Tampa near
West Palm Beach on the Atlantic Coast, sheriff's deputies spent
Friday morning and afternoon helping residents clean up debris and
move large trees that were obstructing roads.
Brazzale toiled to fix roof tiles and replace his shattered windows.
Throughout his neighborhood, Pine Trace at Binks Forest, others were
doing the same thing — cleaning up debris, putting tarps on damaged
roofs and chain sawing fallen trees and branches.
The most important thing is that nobody died here, Brazzale said.
“It’s a significant pressure drop when one of those things goes
over,” he said of the tornado. “You heard it. It was a freight
train.”
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Keller reported from Albuquerque, New Mexico. Isabella O'Malley in
Philadelphia contributed.
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