9 People Who Were Too Unlucky to Have a Good Vacation

Sometimes when your suitcases have been packed, your passport is in your pocket and the plane tickets are in your hands, you get a gut feeling that something is going to go wrong on your vacation. You’ll end up trying to remember whether you switched off the iron back at home or are suffering after realizing you’ve forgotten your phone charger. All these bad moments can be amplified thanks to friends that post their perfect beach photos.

9. What happens when you fall asleep outside:

8. “Came to Greece for a relaxing holiday in the sun. It has rained for 5 days straight, and we are leaving tomorrow.”

7. “The hotel promised us a sea-view room. They actually weren’t lying.”

https://brightside.me/articles/19-people-who-are-too-unfortunate-to-have-a-good-vacation-565410/?utm_source=5_minute_crafts_usa_fb&utm_medium=square_cards&utm_campaign=1st_comment_links&fbclid=IwAR2SbiLE9VkODq-zEOcDRM2mWiT6GG1g0h0Tc617rBfA-avlBOs8Dzhyyu0

5. When one obstacle has passed, but it’s still too early to relax:

https://brightside.me/articles/19-people-who-are-too-unfortunate-to-have-a-good-vacation-565410/?utm_source=5_minute_crafts_usa_fb&utm_medium=square_cards&utm_campaign=1st_comment_links&fbclid=IwAR2SbiLE9VkODq-zEOcDRM2mWiT6GG1g0h0Tc617rBfA-avlBOs8Dzhyyu0

4. “How’s that for an ocean view on your beach vacation?”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BkQV5rllIsB/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=a08155b0-2d71-4ddb-ba46-468af8065afe
https://www.instagram.com/p/BjYfyb8gh27/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=9d50972b-1783-41d1-97fa-d207e8906350

2. “When you wake up for a sunrise at Niagara Falls but forgot to check the weather forecast…”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BjhN09gBh_S/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=70b8d0bb-000f-4697-a0de-016956dbbde2

1. When you’re having your first romantic trip on gondolas, but the traffic is too heavy:

https://www.instagram.com/p/BZzPHrJhWgN/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=2caa1974-6c64-49de-b7cb-cc8359ec87f9

Has anything similar happened to you? Please tell us your stories in the comments and perhaps our next compilation will be about you!

Typhoon Kong-rey Has One of Largest Eyes Ever Seen: ‘Absolutely Massive’

Ameteorologist has pointed out the sheer size of Typhoon Kong-rey’s eye as the massive storm approached Taiwan on Wednesday.

As of Wednesday afternoon, Typhoon Kong-rey had maximum sustained winds of 130 mph, according to the website Zoom Earth. The storm has weakened slightly since Tuesday night, when it was categorized as a super typhoon with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph, equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane. Forecasts anticipate that Typhoon Kong-rey will weaken further by the time it makes landfall in Kaohsiung in the early morning hours on Thursday.

On Tuesday night, meteorologist Noah Bergren of TV station WOFL in Orlando, Florida, commented on the size of the storm’s eye.

“Super Typhoon Kong-rey is easily one of the largest eye’s in a major tropical system you will ever see on Earth,” Bergren posted on X (formerly Twitter). “Thing is absolutely massive.”

A wave crashes outside of Fugang Harbor in Taitung, Taiwan, ahead of Typhoon Kong-rey on Wednesday. The storm is expected to make landfall in Taiwan early Thursday morning. Annabelle Chih/Getty

AccuWeather senior meteorologist Alan Reppert told Newsweek that having a large eye doesn’t necessarily imply anything about the storm’s strength.

“It just means the winds with it are farther away from the center than if it was a smaller eye,” he said. “It doesn’t necessarily have any major defining characteristic of the storm.”

Reppert added that a stronger storm that’s been around longer usually has a wider eye than a newer storm.

Most spaghetti models—or computer models illustrating potential storm paths—show Kong-rey making landfall on Taiwan’s southeast coast and cutting across the island before emerging with maximum sustained winds of around 75 mph. Models indicate that the typhoon will exhibit a northeastern turn away from China, which will take it out to the East China Sea.

Kong-rey’s strength is uncharacteristic for this time of year, The New York Times reported, adding that the typhoon is expected to make landfall equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane.

Reppert warned that strong winds up to 140 mph with higher gusts could hit southern Taiwan, though the storm is expected to weaken as it moves over the island. An AccuWeather report warned of “significant structural damage, mudslides and landslides” from the storm, as up to 3 feet of rain is expected to lash Taiwan. The storm could either maintain its intensity or strengthen before it makes landfall early Thursday.

Eastern China and Japan also are expecting heavy rain as the storm progresses.

A typhoon is classified as a severe tropical cyclone occurring in the Northwest Pacific. A hurricane is the term for the same type of storm in the Northeast Pacific and Northern Atlantic. Outside of these regions, the storms are called tropical cyclones.

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