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Lightning possibly hit Southwest plane flying from Tampa to Denver, airline says

Lightning possibly hit Southwest plane flying from Tampa to Denver, airline says

Yahoo26-05-2025

DENVER, Colo. – Southwest Airlines said Monday that a plane flying from Florida to Colorado was possibly struck by lightning mid-flight.
According to the airline's public relations team, Flight 186 was traveling from Tampa International Airport to Denver International Airport when the possible lightning strike happened.
The aircraft was able to land safely with no injuries, according to Southwest.
Memorial Day Storm Threat Grows As Millions Head Home After Busy Holiday Weekend
"Our maintenance teams took the aircraft out of service for inspection," said Laura Swift, a spokesperson for the airline.
Severe storms are playing out across a large swath of the southern U.S. as millions of people travel for Memorial Day.Original article source: Lightning possibly hit Southwest plane flying from Tampa to Denver, airline says

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10 destinations where you can ditch your car this summer
10 destinations where you can ditch your car this summer

National Geographic

timean hour ago

  • National Geographic

10 destinations where you can ditch your car this summer

More than 45 million U.S. travelers took road trips for Memorial Day 2025—an increase of approximately one million from the previous year, breaking the 2005 record of 44 million people driving to their desired destination for the holiday weekend. Choosing a car-free destination is a way both to save at the pump and help save the planet. Places that prohibit, or at least greatly restrict, motorized vehicles range from the well-known (Venice, Italy, the world's largest pedestrian zone), to the less-charted Geithoorn in the Netherlands and Holbox Island in Mexico. A horn-free, less-hurried vacation can be more relaxing. 'Traveling without a vehicle alleviates the stresses of route-finding under pressure, the headache, and expense of finding parking spots in busy city centers, and allows people to slow down and soak in a destination at walking speed,' says Paul Melhus, CEO and cofounder of ToursByLocals, which leads trips to auto-free zones, including Dubrovnik in Croatia, Governor's Island in New York, and Hydra Island in Greece. Here are 10 places where you can ditch your wheels and start unplugging immediately. Tunø, Denmark Inhabited since the Stone Age and just 1.4 square miles, Denmark's Tunø is easy to explore on foot, bike, scooter, and traxas, the island's tractor taxis. Travelers arrive via a scenic hour-long ferry from Hou (on the Odder Coast of Jutland), perhaps spotting seals and porpoises along the way. Covered in lush green hills that rise above sandy, stony beaches, the island lures hikers and birders. The best views come at the tower of the 14th-century Tunø Church, an unusual combination of chapel and lighthouse surrounded by apple trees and blackberry bushes. Tunø has several restaurants and a microbrewery, as well as a former dairy converted into a soothing and affordable seaside inn. Mackinac Island, Michigan Victorian architecture and old-fashioned atmosphere draw visitors to Michigan's Mackinac Island. Cars are banned, so tourists get around the 3.8-square-mile island on foot, bike, or via horse-drawn carriage. Photograph by Wiltser, Getty Images Located on Lake Huron between Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas, Mackinac Island has been a popular vacation spot since the late 19th century. More than 80 percent of the 3.8-square-mile island is covered by Mackinac Island State Park, with its natural trails and butterfly conservatory. Historic buildings in the postcard-pretty downtown hold boutiques and restaurants including coffeeshop/art school the Watercolor Café and the Ice House BBQ with its expansive garden. The island's seven confectionaries crank out 10,000 pounds of fudge a day. The Grand Hotel, built in 1887 and home to the world's longest front porch, just added a new BMX bike path, a miniature golf course, pickleball courts, and a greenhouse nature center. (Explore why it's important to preserve historic hotels.) Medina of Fez, Morocco One of the largest contiguous car-free urban locations in the world, the 690-acre Medina of Fez is a UNESCO World Heritage site and the best-preserved medieval town in Morocco. Its 9,400 narrow, meandering streets are open only to foot and donkey traffic. Beyond its souks—which sell food, spices, lanterns, and leather—the medina holds centuries-old palaces, mosques, fountains, and schools. The Bab Boujloud (blue gate), is the main entrance to the old town. 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The finest might be the 13th-century Cathedral of St. Lawrence with its 150-foot bell tower, three naves, and a stone portal featuring intricately carved nude images of Adam and Eve. A short-but-dazzling waterfront promenade is lined with palm trees, seafood restaurants, and cafés. Local guide Dino Ivančić jokes, 'I can't keep up with them all. They are like mushrooms, popping out after the rain.' Several music festivals take place here in the summer. For the sunny Adriatic beaches Croatia is known for, Čiovo is a quick walk over a pedestrian bridge. Little Corn Island, Nicaragua A spit of land once frequented by pirates, Little Corn Island feels like a lost tropical paradise. Maybe that's because getting here requires a flight to Great Corn Island, about 50 miles off the coast of Nicaragua, then an eight-mile boat ride onward in the Caribbean. Although tourism is Little Corn's biggest business, even high season is crowd-free. Walk the one-square-mile island under mango, breadfruit, and coconut trees. Or sink into a hammock on palm-shaded beaches. If you're not daunted by heights, climb the vertical metal ladder to the top of the Little Corn Lighthouse, a lightless tower with impressive views of the island and its candy-colored sunsets. Hiking and horseback riding paths head into the jungle and along the shoreline. The idyllic waters surrounding Little Corn can be explored via paddleboard, kayak, or Miskito, a type of primitive wooden sailboat named after the Indigenous people who created them. Porquerolles Island, France A 10-minute water shuttle from the Cote d'Azur zips nature and history fans to Porquerolles, the most-visited of France's Golden Isles. Its pristine stretches of sand, limestone cliffs, and lush greenery can be explored via hiking and biking trails that crisscross the seemingly trapped-in-time island, 80 percent of which forms Port-Cros National Park. Beaches, including secluded Notre Dame, can be reached by ferry, foot, or the many e-bikes for rent. Tour gardens and several historic fortresses, including the 14-century Sainte-Agathe Fort. The Villa Carmignac, a Provençal farmhouse-turned-museum, fills 21,000 square feet with contemporary art. The main village, founded in the 19th century, claims the bulk of the island's 22 restaurants and several shops. There are also dozens of lodgings options, from boutique hotels and villas to houseboats. The blissful surrounds draw thousands of visitors a day in the summer, making spring or early fall the best time to come. Channel Islands, California Wildlife watchers, kayakers, and hikers find crowd-free, car-free nature in California's windswept Channel Islands National Park. Five of these eight small islands off the coast of Santa Barbara can be accessed by private plane or boat or via ferries which operate several times a week in season. The trip through the Pacific takes between one hour to four hours each way; upon arrival you'll need your own water—and a tent if you want to stay over. (Take this epic trail around Canada's Prince Edward Island.) Isolation and a unique mix of warm and cool ocean waters fuel biodiversity on both land and sea. In the depths off Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, and Anacapa islands, snorkelers and divers might see giant black sea bass and California moray eel amid kelp forests and sea caves. Worthwhile hiking trails include a flat walk to Water Canyon Beach on Santa Rosa Island and a grueling 16-miler on foggy, challenging-to-reach San Miguel Island, best attempted with a guide. Birders come to the islands to spot Western gulls, Brandt's cormorants, Scripps's murrelets, and the only nesting population of California brown pelicans along the West Coast. Hoi An, Vietnam Chua Cau, commonly known as the Japanese Covered Bridge, is a wooden structure dating to the 16th century. It's among the historic attractions in the old town of Hội An, Vietnam. Photograph by Peter Forsberg, Alamy Stock Photo Scenic and compact, Hội An is a former colonial trading port on the Thu Bồn River in central Vietnam. Its Old Town, a UNESCO World Heritage site, features 1,000 buildings dating from the 15th through 19th centuries, including shophouses and pagodas. Its most photographed spot? A 400-year-old Japanese bridge, built, some believe, to prevent the mythical Japanese monster Namazu from thrashing about and causing earthquakes. The nights here are ambient and lantern-lit; days buzz with cruises on round, Vietnamese basket boats, cooking classes, or visits to one of Hội An's legendary tailors, who can whip up a custom dress or suit in 48 hours. Refuel with a sweet Vietnamese coffee or a banh mi; Hội An is considered a sandwich capital. There are numerous lodging options, including the new Hội An May Village and Hội An Riverland Villa. Pontevedra, Spain Less than an hour's drive southwest from Spain's Santiago de Compostela, Pontevedra (the capital of a Galician province by the same name) went car-free in 1999, helped by a government program that created 1,600 free parking spaces around its perimeter. Now travelers can traverse Pontevedra's Old Town end-to-end in a 25-minute walk, taking in handsome stone buildings, including the Gothic-style Santa Maria Basilica and the barrel-shaped Church of the Pilgrim Virgin, who is said to guide voyagers along the Portuguese route of the Camino de Santiago. (Learn why the pandemic spurred a pilgrimage travel boom.) Pontevedra Museum showcases Celtic coins, religious iconography, and contemporary paintings. The city's tree-lined central plaza, Plaza de la Herrería, is surrounded by restaurants and bars, most pouring the crisp white wines of the nearby Rías Baixas. After lunch, walk over the Lérez River via the Burgo Bridge, a medieval crossing built over a Roman one. Rottnest Island, Australia Water and wildlife are the big draws at Rottnest Island ('Rotto' to locals), a short ferry ride from Perth, amid the coral reefs and shipwrecks off Australia's western coast. Dozens of beaches offer swimming, snorkeling, sea bikes, and other watery diversions. Glass-bottomed boat trips spotlight marine life such as bottlenose dolphins and 400 species of fish. Rottnest (a mere seven miles by three miles) is small enough to walk in a day, but is best seen via hop-on, hop-off buses that loop around the island, or on an e-bike or Segway. Or explore hidden coves and shorebird-rich wetlands on the Wadjemup Bidi, a 27-mile network of walking trails. Keep an eye out for quokkas, native wallabies with upturned lips that some say are the happiest animal in the world. The Indigenous Whadjuk Noongar people inhabited the island thousands of years ago. Landmarks related to their culture headline in GoCultural's Aboriginal Tours and Experiences. 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Over 1,000 flights delayed amid storms Thursday, 11 canceled
Over 1,000 flights delayed amid storms Thursday, 11 canceled

Yahoo

time13 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Over 1,000 flights delayed amid storms Thursday, 11 canceled

DENVER (KDVR) — A Pinpoint Weather Alert Day has been issued for Thursday evening due to storms that are expected to impact travelers in the air and on the roads. Scattered storms are expected to move through the Denver metro area Thursday and Friday evenings. The storms could be strong to severe and produce damaging winds, large hail and a possible isolated tornado. FOX31 Newsletters: Sign up for weather alerts from the Pinpoint Weather team As of around 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, over a thousand flights at the Denver International Airport have been delayed. According to online flight tracking tool FlightAware, 1,005 flights in and out of DIA have been delayed and 11 have been canceled. The airlines with the most flights impacted include: Southwest: 322 delayed United: 275 delayed Skywest: 210 delayed Frontier: 65 delayed Nearly two dozen airlines reportedly had flights delayed. The following airlines had flights canceled on Thursday: Allegiant Air: 4 Southwest: 3 Frontier: 2 Air Canada: 2 More storms are expected on Friday. Travelers should double-check the status of their flight before heading to the airport, as more delays and cancellations are possible. Stay prepared for storms and forecast changes, a Pinpoint Weather Alert Day and other important weather information: Interactive Denver weather radar Colorado weather alerts Business, church and school closings Weather newsletters FOX31 News app The Pinpoint Weather team will continue to update the forecast multiple times each day. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

May 2025: A look back at last month's weather
May 2025: A look back at last month's weather

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

May 2025: A look back at last month's weather

Your StormTracker 59 team goes back into the weather files to highlight some of the most impactful weather of the month for May 2025: Warmest High Temperature: 81 degrees (May 1st) Coolest High Temperature: 54 degrees (May 26th) Coolest Low Temperature: 36 degrees (May 10th) Warmest Low Temperature: 61 degrees (May 16th) Overall, for the month of May, we were BELOW average. That's not so surprising considering how cold Memorial Day was! Our average May temperature is 61.3 degrees, and we ended up at 59.6 degrees for the month, which is 1.7 degrees below normal. May began on a warm note. The warmest temperature of the month occurred on May 1st at 81 degrees! However, eventually the colder weather set in. Outside of May 29th, the last ten days featured temperatures that were a good bit below normal and that was enough to sway the month to the below normal side. Of particular interest was the stretch from Friday, May 25th to Tuesday, May 27th, where three out of five days failed to see highs reach 60 degrees! In fact, we did not reach 70 degrees for a week straight from the 22nd to the 28th. Wettest Day: 0.73″ (May 13th) Number of Days with Measurable Rainfall: 18 out of 31 days May provided beneficial rains to many parts of the region that were flirting with drought at the beginning of spring. Most towns in May experienced above average rainfall, with Beckley coming in at about a half inch above normal at just over five inches. A lot of this rain came down quickly, however, which was not as beneficial to the water table. However, overall conditions related to drought did improve during the month of May. Memorial Day was one of the coolest holidays in recent memory! High temperatures were stuck in the 50s for most of the region. Beckley only reached 54 degrees officially! We should be in the low to mid 70s. The clouds, occasional sprinkles and overall gloom did not make for good boating or swimming weather to say the least. Launched in 2022, #WeatherTogether is a dedicated community photo album hosted by 59News and StormTracker 59 to allow viewers to submit weather photos directly to us that we can share on all our platforms on-air or online. These photos are also showcased in our web-based photo album on our site for all to see and enjoy! Any photo of interesting weather, storm damage, snowfall, pets playing in puddles or snow and the likes are all welcomed! We hope to use this to showcase the beauty of the two Virginias through the eyes of our viewers and the vastly dynamic weather we see because we think there is no place more beautiful than here. See for yourself the collection of photos already submitted or submit a few of your own, 2025 Monthly Review May 2024 Monthly ReviewCopyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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