- Texas’ biggest wildfire started a year ago. How does the Panhandle look now?
- To her, Hurricane Helene debris isn’t trash. It is full of memories — and she’s returning them
- Bills introduced a year after state’s largest blaze seek to limit wildfires
- A year after Texas’ largest wildfire, Panhandle residents tugged between hope and anxiety
- Another $500M for Hurricane Helene relief in North Carolina passes key hurdle
Saildrone captures amazing new video from inside Category 4 Hurricane Fiona

Ever wondered what the inside of a hurricane looks like at sea level?
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, has released footage from the inside of Hurricane Fiona, the first Category 4 storm of the 2022 season that’s heading north in the Atlantic Ocean.
RELATED: Puerto Rico struggles to reach areas cut off by Fiona, hurricane threatens Bermuda
The footage comes from the Saildrone Explorer SD 1078, a surface vehicle that gathers data around the clock to help scientists better understand hurricane intensification and processes.
SD 1078 is said to be one of seven “hurricane” saildrones operating in the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico during this hurricane season.
Detailed and simplified graphics describing the sensors carried by the Saildrone Explorers during the 2022 mission.
Courtesy: Saildrone
The NOAA says this knowledge is critical to improving storm forecasting and is expected to reduce the loss of human life by enabling better preparedness in coastal communities.
“Saildrone is once again demonstrating its ability to provide critical ocean data in the most extreme weather conditions,” said Richard Jenkins, Saildrone founder and CEO.
NOAA said they also have underwater gliders, surface drifters, profiling floats, and aerial assets to collectively gain deeper insight than ever before into the development of hurricanes.
This is the second video footage Saildrone has released from inside a major hurricane. Last year, SD 1045 spent 24 hours inside Category 4 Hurricane Sam, sending back high-resolution video and images in near real time.
SEE MORE: Saildrone captures inside view of Hurricane Sam in first-of-its-kind video
Copyright © 2022 KTRK-TV. All Rights Reserved.