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WATCH: Cold snap 'freezes' iguanas in Florida, breaks record lows across state

Vero Beach and Fort Pierce break record lows set in 1991
A cold snap swept into Florida overnight. It was so cold that some iguanas started to "freeze" and fall from the trees. This one was taken by a resident in Port Charlotte, Florida, where the low dipped into the 30s on Nov. 11, 2025.
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Cold temperatures pushed into Florida on Tuesday morning, toppling record lows for Nov. 11 that in some cases had stood for decades.

Tuesday morning is the coldest so early in the fall since 1976 in Jacksonville, Florida, and Savannah, Georgia, with both locations dropping to a shivering 28 degrees.

Even Miami flirted with a record low, coming up one degree short at 49 degrees.

According to a preliminary report from the National Weather Service, both Vero Beach (40 degrees) and Fort Pierce (41 degrees) broke record low temperatures set in 1991.

Other notable record lows so far in Florida:

  • Orlando – 36F (Record 39 set in 1932)
  • Daytona – 35F (Record 35 set in 1956)
  • Leesburg – 35F (Record 38 set in 1962)
  • Melbourne – 37F (Record 42 set in 1962)
  • Sanford – 36F (Record 39 set in 1962)
  • Punta Gorda - 39 (Record 44 set in 1943)
  • Vero Beach – 40F (Record 44 set in 1991)
  • Fort Pierce – 41F (Record 42F set in 1991)

The cold is causing South Florida's cold-blooded iguanas to "freeze," or lose muscle control. They can sometimes fall out of trees as a result, which some Floridians saw on Tuesday morning. The iguanas are not dead, but rather in a paralyzed state and can revive if temperatures warm up fast enough.

WATCH BELOW: Cold weather 'freezes' iguanas in Florida

Cold snap 'freezes' iguanas in Florida

If you enjoy the chilly weather, get outside and enjoy it on Tuesday. Temperatures will hover in the high 60s in most locations, but will be back in the mid-70s by Wednesday and back to the 80s by the weekend, according to the WPTV First Alert Weather Team.

Cold blast hits Midwest, Eastern US

Meanwhile, wind-whipped snow continues to pile up in the eastern Great Lakes from a brief bout of Arctic air gripping the eastern US.

Cold conditions farther north have kicked the lake-effect snow machine into gear across the Great Lakes for the first time this year. Snow will contribute to dangerous travel conditions on Tuesday in the snow belts of northeast Ohio, northwest Pennsylvania and western New York.

The heaviest snow has come to an end in the western Great Lakes. Up to a foot of snow fell more than 50 miles south of Chicago, and totals north of the city from far northeast Illinois into southeast Wisconsin topped 10 inches. Dangerous travel conditions from snow and strong winds were reported early Monday along Interstate 57 south of Chicago in Kankakee and northern Iroquois counties in Illinois, the National Weather Service said.

Chicago only picked up 1 to 3 inches of snow, which was accompanied by thunder and strong winds Sunday night into early Monday. Forecasts for the city on Sunday called for potentially historic November snow totals over 10 inches, but the heaviest bands of snow spared the downtown area from those kinds of totals.

WPTV First Alert Weather Forecast for Afternoon of Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2025

Lake-effect snow totals often swing wildly from location to location, depending on where heavier bands develop because of how narrow they are. That’s what happened Monday near Lake Michigan.

Elsewhere, over a foot of snow fell in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and northwest Indiana from Sunday into Monday.

Several inches of snow have also piled up in the Appalachians from West Virginia to the border between North Carolina and Tennessee since Monday. Knoxville, Tennessee, saw its earliest accumulating snow since 1996 on Monday, according to the National Weather Service. Snowflakes have flown through the air as far south as the Atlanta metro area on Monday, and along the North Carolina coast in Wilmington on Tuesday morning.

The good news: The cold snap won’t stick around long. Temperatures across the central US rebound quickly on Tuesday, and most of the East warms up again on Wednesday and Thursday.

A few cities in the Midwest that just saw their first snowflakes of the season could flirt with daily record high temperatures on Saturday. That includes Dubuque, Iowa, and Rockford, Illinois, where thermometers are predicted to soar to near 70 degrees as the weekend begins.

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