More than 9 inches of rain were recorded in a part of Miami-Dade County; meanwhile, radar estimates between Key Largo and the southern Everglades recorded a whopping 15 to 20 inches.
Intense rain in parts of Florida has submerged neighborhoods, turned roads into rivers, closed schools and left more than 108,000 customers without power.
Heavy rain fell over central and southern Florida from Wednesday into early Thursday because of a slow-moving storm system over the Gulf of Mexico.
As many as 7 million people were under flood watches Wednesday. Meanwhile, strong onshore winds created gusts that reached 74 mph at an elevated weather station near Miami and 63 mph at Dania Pier near Fort Lauderdale.
Now just one second. I have it on very good authority that God works in mysterious ways. Your outline above has a clear narrative, and is therefore invalid.
It seems really unusual for so much tropical activity to be happening this late in the year. There's even a potential hurricane brewing south of Cuba. WTF it's mid November!?
I'm not talking about what's on paper. I'm talking about observed climate activity happening in the real world. I've spent nearly 40 years in FL. Shit has changed.
I just moved to Miami last month, from the NYC area and it rained hard for nearly 20 hours. It was raining so hard that I could hear the rain just pelting down on the courtyard 40 feet below me through my glass sliding door and over my TV. We got not one, but two emergency warnings that pretty much said "don't go outside unless you absolutely have to , you might die".
I haven't seen it rain that hard and steadily since Hurricane Sandy hit NJ and NYC.