The idyllic coastal town of Fort Myers, Florida now looks like it has fallen into the ocean as floodwaters from Hurricane Ian engulfed the city Wednesday.

The water is rising so quickly footage from the same camera just an hour apart shows it becoming submerged.

In the first video, the camera positioned six feet above the ground at Lani Kai Resort resort shows fast-moving water flooding the street with garbage floating away.

An hour later, the camera was inundated with water and at times fully submerged. 

The footage shows extremely rough waves flooding what was once a street. It’s unclear how long the camera will continue to hold on. Other videos posted on social media showed houses flooded, downed power cables sparking fireballs and evenb sharks swimming in the flood waters.

Over one million people are also without power in the state, many in Lee County, which includes Fort Myers and neighboring Cape Coral, which has also been devasated by the Hurricane.

Ian made landfall Wednesday afternoon as a Category 4 storm with 155 miles per hour winds. 

Fort Myers, which is under an unenforceable mandatory evacuation, is directly in its path. From there, the storm is set to travel northeast, likely hitting Tampa, Orlando and even Jacksonville, on the east coast.

1 of 2

The camera — which is six feet off the ground — captured views of the storm surge as Hurricane Ian makes landfall.
The camera — which is six feet off the ground — captured views of the storm surge as Hurricane Ian makes landfall.

The camera caught violent waves thrashing through the city.
The camera caught violent waves thrashing through the city.

Footage Wednesday showed Fort Myers, which is home to more than 85,000 people, completely surrounded by water, as cars float away and homes look like they were plopped down in a lake.

A little further south, the upmarket town of Naples is also practically underwater as meteorologists predicted some areas might see storm surges of more than 15 feet of water batter the town. 

Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said Wednesday there are more than 30,000 linemen “staged and ready” to help restore power when it is safe to do so.

You May Also Like

SCOTUS turns down University of Michigan weapons ban case, leaving ‘sensitive places’ restrictions in place

Main: The University of Michigan sign is shown next to a walkway…

Neighbours 'shame' TV star after Nazi salute charge, court hears

He acted in the iconic Australian soap Neighbours, now his neighbours are…

Brittany Mahomes' Tiny Easter Outfit At Family Gathering Is So Distracting

Fernando Leon/Getty Images Brittany…

Missing woman is believed to be ‘held against her will’ after not contacting her family for months: Police

Two images of Shalene Ball (Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension). A South…