Erika Now Projected to Miss South Florida

The streak is alive! After nearly a week of dire predictions about Tropical Storm Erika, it looks this morning like South Florida’s decade-long hurricane-free run is going to continue. Erika is actually no longer a tropical storm — overnight, it weakened into a depression. And this morning’s projections now call…

Erika, Most Confusing Storm Ever, Still Aiming at Miami

In these days of complex computer-graphed simulations and space-assisted data mining, hurricane prediction has steadily approached something like a real, reliable science. Usually, scientists can at least guess with some decent certainty what a hurricane is going to do in the next couple days, if not four or five days…

Will Tropical Storm Erika Hit Miami? Fate Still Up in the Air

See the image up above? That’s the result of meteorologists running Tropical Storm Erika’s data through a bunch of different computer simulation models and placing them all on a single map. You’ll notice just one of those models makes a direct hit in Miami-Dade. You’ll also notice however that Miami…

Danny Now a “Tiny Hurricane” With Gusts Up to 85 MPH

Right now, if you happen to be in the middle of the Atlantic, say 1000 miles or so east of Puerto Rico, you should really be prepared for some serious anthropomorphized weather hell. If you’re in Miami, or anywhere on land, for that matter, there’s nothing much to worry about…

Video Catches Barge Workers Dumping Debris Into Biscayne Bay

Richard Conlin woke up to the clatter of construction on Wednesday. He lives in Southgate Towers at 10th Street and West End. From his window nine stories up, he scanned Biscayne Bay and saw a sight he says he’s grown all too familiar with: the sheen of an oil slick…

Severe Coastal Flooding in Florida Is Getting Worse, New Study Finds

Anyone who’s ever lived on South Beach knows the moment. Thunder booms, rain pounds down in solid sheets of water, and then it happens: The streets suddenly turn into rivers, sending cars and pedestrians bobbing in the massive buildup of precipitation. Floods are part of the contract that comes with…

Dive-Bombing Mockingbirds Terrorize South Florida

One sunny afternoon in June, Denise Weinstein was walking Josie, her shaggy, white, Maltese shih tzu mix, outside Century Village, the 55-and-older South Florida retirement complex where she lives. That’s when the birds attacked. “Two birds were swanning down on me like dive-bombers!” she recalls. “They looked like helicopters.” The…

Miami Celebrities and City Leaders Call for Release of Lolita

Freeing Lolita, an Orca kept for at Miami Seaquarium in the smallest tank in North America for more than four decades, is a cause of many animal right’s organizations both local and national, including PETA. And if there’s one thing PETA is particularly know for its rounding up celebrities and…

Green Spaces, Rooftop Gardens, and Plenty of Trees Coming to Wynwood

Wynwood has a lot going for it – art galleries, a booming restaurant and cafe scene and yeah, that world-class street art. But there’s one thing sorely lacking in the former industrial neighborhood: green space. There’s that one lovely Royal Ponciana rooted outside Panther Coffee and a few flimsy palms…

Miami Developer to Give Gov. Rick Scott Environmentalist Award

By most expert accounts, Gov. Rick Scott’s tenure in Tallahassee has been a flat-out catastrophe for the Sunshine State’s already fragile environment. He slashed water management budgets and stacked regulatory board with developers. He battled tooth-and-nail against new clean water mandates. Even muttering the words “climate change” was banned in…

Meet the New Cockroach Species That’s Likely Headed for Miami

As if we didn’t already have enough cockroaches in South Florida, there’s a new beast in town. Last month, environmental scientist Marc Minno was ruffling through stacks of papers on his office floor, in Live Oak, Florida, north of Gainesville, when he spotted an interesting looking bug. He wasn’t startled,…

Miami Is the Second Sweatiest City in America, Scientific Study Finds

Miami is a sweaty city. Residents stick to their leather car seats. They turn back home if they forget to roll on deodorant. The probability of pit stains determines whether anyone wears sleeves that day. Miamians tackle their secreting fluids from just about every orifice: boob sweat, crotch sweat, under-the-knee…