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Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Tropical Cyclone Horacio becomes monster Category 5 storm

February 24, 2026
Tropical Cyclone Horacio becomes monster Category 5 storm

We may be months away from the start of the Atlantic hurricane season, but tropical cyclones are spinning somewhere on the planet.

USA TODAY

Indeed, on the other side of the world, "Tropical Cyclone Horacio became the world's first Category 5 tropical cyclone of 2026 on Monday afternoon, February 23, topping out with 160 mph winds over the warm waters of the remote South Indian Ocean," said meteorologist Jeff Masters on theYale Climate Connections blog.

Forecasters from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center say that Horacio has peaked in intensity and will steadily weaken as it moves southward over cooler waters. Fortunately, Masters said Horacio is far from any land areas and is only a threat to marine interests.

While not a threat to land, Horacio is a reminder that the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season is only three months away. What might it bring?

A haboob comes into Chandler, Ariz. on Aug. 25, 2025. An evening lightning storm lights up the skies near the Sanibel Causeway in Southwest Florida on Saturday, Aug. 16, 2025. Lightning strikes over downtown Phoenix during a monsoon storm on Aug. 13, 2025. Clouds and sunset in Sarasota, Florida, on Aug. 6, 2025. Lightning strikes over the Dragon Bravo Fire burning on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon on July 15, 2025. Hikers reach the summit of Piestewa Peak during sunrise as record-breaking heat of 118 degrees is predicted in Phoenix on July 9, 2025. Phoenix is the fifth-largest city in the United States and the hottest metropolis. The shoreline reflects a lightning bolt as an afternoon thunderstorm moves over Daytona Beach. The National Lightning Safety Council encourages people to head indoors after hearing the first clap of thunder. Lightning illuminates the skies over Pine Island, Florida on Wednesday, June 25, 2025. Recent storms have moved in bringing with them rain and lightning. Photographed from the Sanibel Causeway from a distance. There were storms over the ocean over Memorial Day weekend. On Saturday night, May 24, 2025, eerie blue lights could be seen near the shore in Cocoa Beach with lightning lighting the sky behind them. The blue glows turned out to be lights on the mast of a sailboat anchored just offshore, maybe to avoid the storms. NHRA top fuel drivers Clay Millican (left) and Tony Stewart race as a dust storm approaches the track during qualifying for the Route 66 Nationals at Route 66 Raceway in Joliet, Il. On May 16, 2025. Lightning moves across the sky over the McKenzie River near Hayden Bridge in Springfield, Ore. Tuesday, July 16, 2024. The sun rises behind a surfer at JP Luby Beach on Saturday, July 6, 2024, in Corpus Christi, Texas. The national weather service has issued a hurricane watch for the Coastal Bend as Tropical Storm Beryl travels across the Gulf. Lightning strikes behind Papago Park in Phoenix during a monsoon thunderstorm on Aug. 8, 2024. A dust storm moves across the East Valley in Phoenix as a monsoon storm approaches on Aug. 22, 2024. The sun rises over the destroyed Fort Myers Beach pier as Hurricane Milton approaches Florida on Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024. The town is empty as most residents have evacuated. A double rainbow appears over Reno, Nev. on Feb. 4, 2025. Michael Hagerty is silhouetted as the sun begins to break through the clouds over West Dennis Beach, Mass. Monday morning, Feb. 10, 2025. Hagerty is from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and West Dennis and was out on the beach cross country skiing on the crunchy snow. High winds blow massive amounts of dirt and sand through the windmills where the Whitewater River flows when there is rain just west of Indian Canyon Dr. in Palm Springs, Calif., Feb. 11, 2025. Sunset blazes over downtown Des Moines, Iowa on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024. Olympic athletes train on the Charles River the evening before the start of the Head of the Charles Regatta rowing event, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2024. Pablo Rodriguez of Sleepy Hollow and his children Justin. 13, and Mateo, 7, fish under storm clouds at the Tarrytown, N.Y. waterfront Aug. 6, 2024. With heavy rains forecasted for overnight and into tomorrow, the National Weather Service has issued a flood warning for the Lower Hudson Valley from 2 p.m. Tuesday to noon Wednesday. Lightning strikes behind a RNC 2024 Milwaukee flag display on the opening day of the Republican National Convention on Monday July 15, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wis. Waves crash against the lighthouse at the entrance to the harbour during Storm Nelson, in Les Sables-d'Olonne, western France, on March 28, 2024. Lightning strikes in front of the Superstition Mountains as a storm approaches the East Valley on March 18, 2024. Water rushes over the Paterson Great Falls National Historical Park in Paterson, NJ on Friday Dec. 22, 2023. Mist from the falls created hazardous ice conditions and an opportunity for people to take photos. The landmark Kuwait Towers and other skyscrapers pierce through the cloud cover over Kuwait City on December 10, 2023. Lightning illuminates the skies over Tempe as seen from an apartment complex on Broadway Road on Aug. 31, 2023. Beachgoers check out the surf as Hurricane Idalia approaches Florida at Times Square on Fort Myers Beach on Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2023. Heat lightning in the clouds rolling in over the Banana River and the Thousand Islands in Cocoa Beach, Fla. after dusk are captured in this 30 second exposure on Aug. 14, 2023. The first dust storm of the monsoon season rolls over Camelback Mountain in Paradise Valley on July 17, 2023. Monday was the 18th day in a row of temperatures 110 degrees or more which tied the record from 1974. Football fans evacuate Kinnick Stadium as a bolt of lightning flashes overhead during a weather delay in the third quarter of Iowa's non-conference NCAA football game against Nevada on Saturday, Sept. 17, 2022, in Iowa City, Iowa. Lightning strikes as rain falls. Lightning strikes behind Camelback Mountain as rain falls during a monsoon storm on July 16, 2022. Lightning from a monsoon thunderstorm illuminates the sky behind the Phoenix Sky Harbor control tower on June 29, 2022. Bands of rain fall over the McDowell Mountains in Scottsdale during a monsoon storm on June 26, 2022. Colder temperatures created ice pancakes on Lake Ontario in Rochester, N.Y. on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022.   The Charlotte Pier was also ice covered, retaining the form of the waves that crashed over the pier. An aerial view shows a snow covered landscape on a sunny winter day of Jan. 6, 2022, near Winterberg, western Germany. Monday evening thunder storms  moving in from the west brought an incredible lightning show to the Space Coast. A single 20 second exposure captured numerous bolts over the Thousand Islands in Cocoa Beach, Fla. A bolt of lightning crosses the sky as people look at buildings displaying a light show on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing on June 30, 2021. Lightning breaks through the clouds over agricultural fields in South Oxnard, Calif. late Monday, October 4, 2021 as an hours-long storm swept through Ventura County. Lightning sparks in the sky atop of the of the empty Beira Rio stadium in Porto Alegre, Brazil, before the start of the closed-door Copa Libertadores football match between Brazil's Internacional and Argentina's Boca Juniors on December 2, 2020. The skies over the west side were ablaze in color looking down Ontario Avenue, Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020, following rains in Sheboygan, Wis. A view of ESPN Wide World Of Sports Complex during a lightning storm following a game between the Phoenix Suns and Milwaukee Bucks at The Field House on Aug. 10, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Maximilian Krauss of SpVgg Unterhaching controls the ball while a massive shelf cloud rolls in during the 3. Liga match between SpVgg Unterhaching and FC Carl Zeiss Jena at Alpenbauer Sportpark on July 01, 2020 in Unterhaching, Germany. Overall view of a shelf cloud with a lightning bolt from a tornado warned supercell thunderstorm on May 19, 2020 in Ulysses, Ks. Lightning crackles across the sky above a windmill along the railroad tracks in Merkel, Texas Thursday May 21, 2020. More storms are predicted for Memorial Day weekend, and later into the week beyond. Lightning  strikes behind the chapel of Panagia Gorgona in the village of Skala Sykamias, north of Lesbos, on Feb. 27, 2020. Lghtening strikes on a building during a thunderstorm in Bangkok on Oct. 27, 2019.  Lightning strikes over Tempe Town Lake,  Tempe, Ariz. during a storm on Aug. 28, 2019. Storm clouds are illuminated by the setting sun as lightning strikes near Maricopa, Ariz. on Aug. 28, 2019. Lightnings flash over the Saint-Michel Basilica during a storm in Bordeaux, southwestern France, on July 6, 2019. ( Snow covers the saguro cacti and palm trees near Carefree, Ariz. Feb. 21, 2019. A dust storm moves towards Wells Fargo Arena in Tempe on Aug. 9, 2016.  Lightning streaks across the desert sky over the McDowell Mountains near Scottsdale, Ariz. during a monsoon storm on July 15, 2017.  Families and volunteers such for family papers and valuables among the debris in Beauregard, Ala., following a deadly tornado, March 7, 2019.

Lightning, tornadoes and wild storms: Incredible weather photos

El Niño may hold the key

Forecasters say that an oncoming El Niño will likely play a significant role in the strength and activity of the 2026 hurricane seasons, both in the Atlantic and Pacific basins.

El Niño, a natural warming of tropical Pacific Ocean water, "usually reduces the number of hurricanes in the Atlantic, especially in the Caribbean and Gulf," said Andy Hazelton, an associate scientist with the University of Miami, in an email to USA TODAY.

At the same time, El Niño's impacts also often include more active hurricane seasons in the eastern and central Pacific Oceans. "El Niño tends to lead to more active Pacific seasons, though the details of where the warmest water sets up (East vs. Central Pacific) may determine which basin is most above normal," Hazelton said.

Cyclone Horacio is shown in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar on Feb. 24, 2026 in an adjusted satellite image from EUMETSAT Meteosat data.

Earth averages five Category 5 storms per year

Horacio is the first Category 5 in the Southern Hemisphere since Cyclone Errol achieved that status off the coast of northwestern Australia on April 16, 2025.

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The 1990-2025 average yearly number of Category 5 storms globally was 5.3; there were five in 2025 (Hurricanes Melissa, Erin, and Humberto in the Atlantic; Typhoon Ragasa in the Northwest Pacific; and Cyclone Errol in the South Indian), Masters said.

Interestingly, even though El Niño tends to reduce Atlantic hurricanes, Hazelton said that the last three Category 5 hurricanes to hit the United States (Camille 1969, Andrew 1992, and Michael 2018) all occurred during hurricane seasons as the ocean was transitioning to weak El Niño conditions.

Hurricanes, typhoons, and cyclones, oh my!

To clarify, hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones are all the same type of storm, known collectively as tropical cyclones. They have different names depending on which basin they form in.

Hurricanes form in the Atlantic basin, along with the eastern and central Pacific basins. Typhoons form in the western Pacific, while cyclones (aka tropical cyclones) form in the Indian Ocean and in the South Pacific.

Unlike the North Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from June through November, the South Indian Ocean cyclone season typically runs from November through April, similar to the Southern Hemisphere cyclone seasons near Australia.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, cyclones can technically form year‑round in the Indian Ocean, but November-April is when conditions are most favorable – which means warm ocean water and lower wind shear.

Doyle Rice is a national correspondent for USA TODAY, with a focus on weather and climate.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tropical Cyclone Horacio becomes monster Category 5 cyclone

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Norway's King Harald admitted to a hospital on the Spanish island of Tenerife

February 24, 2026
Norway's King Harald admitted to a hospital on the Spanish island of Tenerife

OSLO, Norway (AP) — King Harald of Norway has been admitted to a hospital in Spain's Canary Islands during a winter vacation there, the royal palace said Tuesday.

Associated Press

Harald, who turned 89 on Saturday, was admitted to the hospital on Tenerife on Tuesday evening and was being treated for an unspecified infection and dehydration, the palace said in a statement. It added that he was reported to be in good condition.

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The king's personal physician will travel to Tenerife and an update on Harald's health will be issued on Wednesday after he has assessed the situation, the palace added.

It said that Harald and Queen Sonja were in Tenerife for a winter vacation. Harald has been Norway's monarch since 1991.

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4 military working dogs died due to "unsatisfactory" facilities, DoD watchdog finds

February 24, 2026
4 military working dogs died due to

Four military working dogs died between the 2021 and 2023 fiscal years because they were housed and trained in "aging and unsatisfactory kennel facilities," the Defense Department inspector general found, although the Air Force disputes the deaths were the result of neglect.

CBS News

An Air Force spokesperson said autopsies determined one of the dogs died of severe bronchopneumonia and three died due to extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli pneumonia. The autopsies did not attribute the deaths to neglect, the spokesperson said.

But the Air Force concurs with the overall recommendation in the report to increase the number of caretakers for military working dogs and to develop a plan to upgrade all of the kennel facilities.

The inspector general in a report published last week found the military working dog program did not consistently protect dogs in non-training status "from extreme weather conditions and kennel mold issues, or manage quarantine and isolation areas."

Undated: DoD dog displaying stress behaviors with its water bucket, TRS Kennel facilities, Joint Base Antonio-Lackland, Texas. / Credit: Defense Dept. inspector general

Investigators visited 12 installations of different service branches with dog programs, including North Carolina's Fort Bragg, where they found "mold in the light fixtures, ceiling tiles, and equipment room" of one of the buildings. Another building was closed because of mold growth.

In addition to the aging facilities around the country, investigators found a group of about 200 dogs at Joint Base San Antonio Lackland, in Texas — where all the dogs undergo their initial training — did not receive the required amount of physical or social activity because of a caretaker shortage.

Instead of the five hours of physical activity, social, and cognitive enrichment that are required for the dogs each day, the report found the dogs were walked for about 10 minutes, four times a week, or less.

The investigators focused on dogs that were in "non-training status," meaning they are not awaiting deployment, have a medical disposition, or are in a rejected-from-training status.

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In general, the dogs that are in training status receive "sufficient" physical and social activity. At the time of the site visit, the unit had about 230 military dogs that were not in training status.

In total, the Pentagon has over 2,200 Working Dog Teams across 182 locations worldwide and provides dogs to agencies at the state and federal level, the Air Force spokesperson said.

The inspector general recommended that the secretary of the Air Force reduce the number of dogs at the training squadron until there are enough caretakers to provide adequate care, and also said a plan should be developed to upgrade the kennel facilities so that they meet current Defense Department standards.

The dogs at Joint Base San Antonio Lackland showed behaviors like "continuous spinning, jumping, chewing on their metal water buckets, and excessive vocalization," according to investigators, that were signs of the lack of physical and social activity. They also showed physical signs of heat stress, "including rapid panting with enlarged tongues and ears swept back."

Undated: DoD dog in open-air kennel facilities exposed to ambient weather conditions / Credit: Defense Dept. inspector general

The training squadron told investigators it lacked the manpower for the required five hours of physical activity but did try to provide some enrichment through "inflatables, audio books, music, and scented bubble machines." Investigators said this was not sufficient.

In response to the recommendations, the Air Force assistant deputy chief of staff for logistics said the program now is allowing the training squadron to hire more caretakers for the military working dogs and would reduce the number of dogs in "non-training status."

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Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos Watch in Horror as “Live”’s 'Trivia Dancer’ Has Epic Fall

February 24, 2026
Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos Watch in Horror as

Live With Kelly and Mark

People Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos on the Feb. 24 episode of 'Live with Kelly and Mark' Live With Kelly and Mark

NEED TO KNOW

  • A staffer filling in as the show's Trivia Dancer fell during a breakdancing routine on the Feb. 24th episode

  • Hosts Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos checked on the staffer, who quickly recovered and finished the segment

  • The show is temporarily audience-free due to a major snowstorm that disrupted travel across New York City

Kelly RipaandMark Consuelosbriefly pausedLive with Kelly and Markafter a staffer taking part in the show's "Live Trivia Dancer" tradition took a tumble during Tuesday's episode.

The moment happened on the Feb. 24 broadcast as the ABC daytime talk show kicked off its Freeze the Day Travel Trivia segment, which typically begins with an audience member dancing before the trivia caller attempts to answer the question.

Becausea headline-making bomb cyclonehas forced theNew York City-based show to go audience-free, staffers have been filling in — including associate producer Noah Breske, who stepped onto the stage to perform Tuesday's dance.

Set toKylie Minogue's "Can't Get You Out of My Head," Breske began showing off energetic — and increasingly complicated — breakdancing moves.

Noah Breske on 'Live with Kelly and Mark' on Tuesday, Feb. 24 Live With Kelly and Mark

Live With Kelly and Mark

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But towards the end of his routine, Breske's arm gave out and he fell onto the studio floor.

The camera then cut to Ripa and Consuelos, who reacted with shocked expressions and nervous laughter as they watched from their seats.

Breske quickly got back up and finished the segment, raising up his arms in celebration at the end.

Noah Breske on 'Live with Kelly and Mark' on Tuesday, Feb. 24 Live With Kelly and Mark

Live With Kelly and Mark

Afterwards, the hosts checked in on him. "You alright?" Consuelos asked, Ripa adding, "Noah, honey, are you okay?"

"Yeah, I was good for a second. I was good," Breske replied.

"Your shoulder good?" Consuelos followed up, prompting Ripa to reference the trivia caller waiting on the line — Kim Fahrion from Matawan, N.J., who had introduced herself earlier as an equine massage therapist.

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"We know a good equine massage therapist on the phone, just in case," Ripa joked.

Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos watch as Live’s 'Trivia Dancer’ has epic fall Live With Kelly and Mark

Live With Kelly and Mark

This is the second day in a rowLive with Kelly and Markhas broadcast without an audience.

The temporary format change comes as a powerful blizzard swept through New York City and the broader Northeast on Sunday and Monday, dumping nearly 20 inches of snow in Central Park and ranking among the city's 10 largest snowstorms on record. The storm prompted travel bans, transit disruptions and widespread closures across the tri-state area.

But the long-running daytime show still aired. Ripa, 55, and Consuelos, 54, flew back from their second home in California early to make it there for Monday's show.

"I gotta tell you, I'm thrilled that we rushed home from Palm Springs and the 80-degree sunshine," Ripa joked.

The couple slept in a hotel across the street from ABC's downtown studio to ensure they would be able to make it to the show in time.

"Mark and I spent the night in a hotel last night," Ripa explained on Monday. "The hotel across the street from the studio. Which, I thought would be an easy commute but as it turns out it was a very difficult commute because drudging through the snow [was hard] and the wind was very blustery."

She went on to note that she's been by Consuelos' side for every major blizzard that has struck New York City, including those in 1996, 2006 and 2016.

"This happens as you said, every 10 years," Consuelos noted. "May we be together for a few more! 60 years!"

"No," Ripa quickly replied. "May we never endure another blizzard!"

Live with Kelly and Markairs weekdays in syndication (check local listings).

Read the original article onPeople

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