FCDO travel advice for USA. Includes safety and security, insurance, entry requirements and legal differences.
www.gov.uk
This is what the UK gov't has to say about weather and natural disasters in the USA.
Extreme weather and natural disasters
Find out what you can do to prepare for and respond to
extreme weather and natural hazards.
Snowstorms
Snowstorms can disrupt critical infrastructure, and cause power cuts, or delays and cancellations in major transport hubs. Contact your travel company or airline before you travel.
Hurricanes
The Atlantic hurricane season normally runs from June to November. The Pacific hurricane season normally runs from May to November. Hurricanes can affect coastal regions, Hawaii and Guam. The South Pacific tropical cyclone season normally runs from November to May and can affect American Samoa.
You should:
Earthquakes
While earthquakes can happen anywhere without warning in the US, Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington and the entire Mississippi River Valley are at higher risk for earthquakes.
The FEMA website has advice about
what to do before, during and after an earthquake.
Tornadoes
Tornadoes can happen anytime depending on weather conditions. The FEMA website has advice about
what to do before, during and after a tornado.
Volcanic eruptions
There is volcanic activity across parts of the US with Alaska, Hawaii, California, Washington and Oregon having the largest number of active volcanoes. You should follow the advice of local authorities, including any evacuation orders.
The FEMA website has advice about
what to do before, during and after a volcanic eruption.
Wildfires
Forest and brush fires (wildfires) are a danger in many dry areas, particularly in canyons, hills and forests. High winds can mean fires spread rapidly.
You should:
- monitor local media and weather reports
- follow the advice of local authorities, including any evacuation orders
- be careful in areas recently affected by wildfires, as there may be mudslides during heavy rainfall
For more information visit the
National Interagency Fire Center and
Fire Research and Management Exchange System websites.
For information about wildfires in California, see the
CAL FIRE website.