Category 1 Hurricane Imelda strengthened overnight and is on the cusp of Category 2 strength as it approaches Bermuda, which remains under a hurricane warning. The storm also picked up the pace ...
The U.S. Coast Guard rescued two men who were reported overdue from returning from a kayak trip in the Florida Keys on Monday night.
Freeze -dried strawberries covered in chocolate shouldn’t have metal — actual, hard metal — which is why Georgia Nut Company recalled two kinds of Tru Fru nationwide.
As Imelda moved even further offshore from Florida’s east coast, the threat of gusty winds and heavy rain dwindled. However, the Miami office of the National Weather Service warned, Imelda will leave ...
However, Florida and the Bahamas will see some rain and blustery winds throughout the day Sunday and Monday from Imelda — with the most intense conditions over the islands, which were under a tropical ...
Here are some event highlights, along with other helpful things to know for a fall visit to the Florida Keys: Taste the Keys: Oct. 1-31 - Florida Keys cuisine on weekly foodie tours by trolley, ...
A not-food-in-your-food recall involving two brands of corn dogs and sausage on a stick made in a suburb of Fort Worth. Five people were injured.
A stretch of the Florida coast from Martin County to Volusia County was placed under a tropical storm watch Saturday morning — though the strongest winds of soon-to-be Tropical Storm Imelda were ...
People have been sickened in Florida, California, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas and nine other states.
A tropical storm is forecast to scrape by Florida’s East coast over the weekend before potentially making landfall in the Carolinas as a Category 1 hurricane as soon as Monday.
The chances that Florida will feel rain, surf and winds from a tropical system next week continues to rise. Humberto, now a hurricane, is on track to steer clear of the U.S. coast. But the tropical ...
Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Humberto is chugging along in the open Atlantic, where it’s expected to become a hurricane over the weekend and potentially a major hurricane early next week.