Categories: Cocoa Beach

"Gustnado" Sends Umbrellas Flying In Cocoa Beach (VIDEO)

COCOA BEACH, Florida — Around 3:30 p.m., a yet-to-be confirmed tornado, waterspout, or  microburst, touched down on the beach at the end of Minuteman Causeway in Cocoa Beach, Florida.

The  witnesses said that the winds reached 60 to 70 miles an hour and sent tents, beach umbrellas, and children’s inflatable water toys flying into the air.
A teenager was struck by the debris and transported by Brevard County Fire Rescue to Cape Canaveral Hospital.
This particular stretch of beach is popular and crowded on Sunday afternoons next to Coconut’s on the Beach.

UPDATE: The National Weather Service in Melbourne has preliminarily determined that the weather event was a “Gustnado” that is an official meteorological term for “a small whirlwind which is not a tornado.”

According to NWS, a gustnado is a small, whirlwind which forms as an eddy in thunderstorm outflows. They do not connect with any cloud-base rotation and are not tornadoes. Since their origin is associated with cumuliform clouds, gustnadoes will be classified as Thunderstorm / Wind events. Like dust devils, some stronger gustnadoes can cause damage. 

View Comments

  • Not exactly true. A tornado/waterspout is a vortex, thus wind from all directions. Judging my the umbrellas circling around the vortex this was indeed a very minor tornado/waterspout.

  • Not exactly true. A tornado/waterspout is a vortex, thus wind from all directions. Judging my the umbrellas circling around the vortex this was indeed a very minor tornado/waterspout.

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