Hurricane hunters film harrowing flight through eye of Ian: ‘Never seen so much lightning’
A harrowing journey through Hurricane Ian was captured on video by an engineer travelling onboard a NOAA aircraft who described the flight as one of the “roughest” of his entire career.
“I have never seen the bunks come out like that. There was coffee everywhere. I have never felt such lateral motion,” tweeted National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration engineer and hurricane hunter Nick Underwood on Wednesday night.
The footage shared by the engineer quickly captured the attention of online revellers closely following the Category 4 – nearing Category 5 – hurricane that made landfall on the southwestern coast on Wednesday afternoon, leaving a path of wreckage in its wake and sending more than two million Floridians into darkness.
“I have flown storms for the last six years. This flight to Hurricane #Ian on Kermit (#NOAA42) was the worst I’ve ever been on. I’ve never seen so much lightning in an eye,” Mr Underwood tweeted earlier in the day, before sharing the video footage that showed beds – previously screwed into the walls of the aircraft – spilling onto the floor.
“Holy …,” Mr Underwood can be heard towards the end of the footage as the frame shakes uncontrollably and the sound of constant whirring that’s been heard in the background is temporarily cut off.
When I say this was the roughest flight of my career so far, I mean it. I have never seen the bunks come out like that. There was coffee everywhere. I have never felt such lateral motion.
Aboard Kermit (#NOAA42) this morning into Hurricane #Ian. Please stay safe out there. https://t.co/DQwqBwAE6v pic.twitter.com/gvV7WUJ6aS— Tropical Nick Underwood (@TheAstroNick) September 28, 2022
“You good back there?” one of the engineer’s colleagues can be heard asking, to which a momentarily flummoxed Mr Underwood replies: “Ah ya, we’re good.”
Though gathering some of the earlier footage at night-time, the engineer explained that his point of view was so well lit up not because of lighting inside the aircraft, but from the intense lightning raging outside the windows.
“This was the eye. You can see the curvature. Understand this is at NIGHT. The light is from LIGHTNING,” he tweeted while sharing a perfectly lit picture.
I have flown storms for the last six years. This flight to Hurricane #Ian on Kermit (#NOAA42) was the worst I’ve ever been on. I’ve never seen so much lightning in an eye.
This was the eye. You can see the curvature. Understand this is at NIGHT. The light is from LIGHTNING. pic.twitter.com/cfZ9ls6YD3— Tropical Nick Underwood (@TheAstroNick) September 28, 2022
Travellers on board the Kermit were not, as their title of “hurricane hunters” might suggest, flying around the eye of a Category 4 storm for leisure. As described by the NOAA, the experts on the aircraft play an important role in assisting crew on the ground make forecasts about the path and strength of a hurricane.
“Data collected during hurricanes by these high-flying meteorological stations help forecasters make accurate predictions during a hurricane and help hurricane researchers achieve a better understanding of storm processes, improving their forecast models,” the NOAA writes on the website describing the team of highly trained specialists.
Mr Underwood also offered up a bit of clarity after sharing the since-viral video on his timeline, which by Thursday morning had garnered more than 1.2 million views and been liked and reshared thousands of times.
“We fly these missions to collect critical data on the storm,” tweeted Mr Underwood, noting that the jet that he was flying in was a WP-3D made for NOAA back in the 1970s. “Everyone is strapped in, and we tie down/stow everything best we can,” he added, before sharing that it was indeed his Adidas sneakers that can be seen flying up beside him.y
Want to stress we don’t this for fun. It’s a public service. We go up there to gather data on the storm that can keep folks on the ground safe.
Those forecast models? A lot of the data comes from what we do. I’m a very small part of a large team. Incredible teammates. https://t.co/4rdj5NBOiM— Tropical Nick Underwood (@TheAstroNick) September 28, 2022
The stomach-churning turbulence that Mr Underwood captured even landed him guest appearances on national news programs, something that he later joked about not being the best prepared for as he MacGyvered his hotel room to an impromptu TV studio.
“me in a Fairfield Inn hotel room in Webster, Texas about to go on national television: how do I set up my background to make it look like I’m not in a Fairfield Inn hotel room in Webster, Texas?” he jibed, before sharing a picture of the one book he could have on display in the background: The Nutmeg of Consolation, a historical novel set during the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812.
“One book on the bed behind me. Aesthetic perfection,” jested Mr Underwood in a tweet.
One book on the bed behind me. Aesthetic perfection. pic.twitter.com/GncQzuoLG6
— Tropical Nick Underwood (@TheAstroNick) September 28, 2022
Fellow hurricane specialists commended Mr Underwood and his colleagues on board the aircraft that steered itself straight into the eye of the storm, noting how their work provides critical data that has the ability to save lives.
“Their morning flights in extreme turbulence provided necessary data making #Ian a 135 kt Cat 4 hurricane on the 11z special advisory today,” tweeted Philippe Papin, a hurricane specialist at the National Weather Service’s National Hurricane Center, while resharing Mr Underwood’s original video.
Just want to say how appreciative we are at NHC of @NOAA_HurrHunter & @53rdWRS for tremendous efforts they provide to get us critical data.
Their morning flights in extreme turbulence provided necessary data making #Ian a 135 kt Cat 4 hurricane on the 11z special advisory today. https://t.co/11nQOambD1— Philippe Papin (@pppapin) September 28, 2022
“Wow. Severe turbulence in #Ian was super scary. So much respect for all of @NOAA_HurrHunter and @403rdWing for risking their lives to get critical, life-saving data we could not get any one way,” tweeted senior hurricane specialist Eric Blake.
Wow. Severe turbulence in #Ian was super scary. So much respect for all of @NOAA_HurrHunter and @403rdWing for risking their lives to get critical, life-saving data we could not get any one way. 🙏 https://t.co/cGphlANI8g
— Eric Blake 🌀 (@EricBlake12) September 28, 2022
Since making landfall on Wednesday, Hurricane Ian has prompted President Joe Biden to declare a major disaster in Florida while some residents in the worst hit parts of the state remain trapped in their homes with some taking to social media to issue their rescue pleas.
Businesses and large attractions across the state remained closed for Thursday and Friday, including Disney World Resorts and Universal Orlando, as the storm continued to move through central and eastern Florida. As it blows across the Sunshine State, the storm is expected to drop 12 -18 inches of rain with sustained winds of more than 75mph.