8:24PM October 31, 2025
So far this year, the Gulf has been very quiet with only one short-lived tropical storm (Barry).
Assuming this holds (which is likely), this would be the quietest Gulf season since 2015, and the first season without US Gulf coast tropical cyclone impacts since 2014. pic.twitter.com/jJhIuRRMwW
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) October 31, 2025
5:51PM October 31, 2025
Overnight lows will again dip into the upper 30s in many communities across southwest Alabama and inland portions of NW Florida.
Temperatures will be in the upper 40s closer to the coast. pic.twitter.com/p5Anub6ODt
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) October 31, 2025
1:16PM October 31, 2025
🎃👻 40 Years Ago – Hurricane #Juan made a second landfall near Gulf Shores, AL midday on Halloween in 1985.
🥨 Juan is known for its unusual track (pretzel-shaped) and subsequent heavy rainfall across Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama & Florida.
💻 https://t.co/w3AJGJfTjv pic.twitter.com/typLgp69Uf
— NWS Mobile (@NWSMobile) October 31, 2025
11:53PM October 30, 2025
We’re headed to the upper 30s for overnight lows in many communities across the region. 40s likely closer to the coast.
Chilly overnight hours. 🥶 pic.twitter.com/vq5SuM26T1
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) October 31, 2025
9:43PM October 30, 2025
Agree. Top end of the Saffir-Simpson Scale (category 5) means “catastrophic” Hurricane Michael-type damage.
As someone who has seen the damage zones after every, single category of hurricanes firsthand, it makes zero sense to add categories. https://t.co/QA2qVysBuS
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) October 31, 2025
4:24PM October 30, 2025
We’re beginning to see clearing skies across parts of west Alabama and near Dauphin Island, but it appears much of the region will remain cloudy into the evening hours. Cold, dreary evening for many! pic.twitter.com/Y5xkqz98Xr
— Spinks Megginson (@rzweather) October 30, 2025







