Violent winds and cloudbursts from Hurricane Ian, which made landfall on Florida’s southwest seacoast on Wednesday, have produced” disastrous” desolation and flooding.
Houses are destroyed and some are floating away as Ian's eyewall hammers southwest Florida. This is video from Fort Myers Beach, Florida off Estero Blvd by Loni Architects pic.twitter.com/6GqrxLRv9Q
— Kaitlin Wright (@wxkaitlin) September 28, 2022
A videotape has surfaced on the Internet showing the massive destruction of houses and land caused by the hurricane. The videotape shows houses submerged in water and trees breaking piecemeal from strong winds and heavy rains in Fort Myers Beach, Florida.
The videotape was participated by a meteorologist from Charlotte, North Carolina named Kaitlin Wright on Twitter on Wednesday and has been credited to Loni Engineers.
Houses are destroyed and some are floating down as Ian’s eyewall hammers southwest Florida. This is videotape from Fort Myers Beach, Florida, off Estero Blvd by Loni Engineers,” she wrote while participating the post.
Since being participated, the videotape has crossed over1.7 million views and,000 likes. further than,500 druggies have reshared the videotape on Twitter. multitudinous druggies have supplicated for the situation to get better in the comment section of the post.
utmost of the videotape of that area was from hours agonso I wondered how bad it had gotten. transferring prayers to all in the path,” wrote one stoner.A alternate stoner wrote,” It’s really heartbreaking.”
According to Yahoo News, after Hurricane Ian made landfall and began to lash the state’s west seacoast with strong winds and flooding on Wednesday autumn, further than 1 million homes and businesses in southwest Florida were left without electricity.
previous to the” veritably dangerous” order four hurricane making landfall in Lee County, Florida, Naples saw 150 mph gusts and a storm swell that was further than seven bases high.
The outlet further said that a warning has been issued by the National Hurricane Center that the storm surges in the counties of Lee and Charlotte could reach heights of over to 18 bases.