NHC.NOAA.gov Website Down: What Is the Latest Hurricane Matthew Advisory?

CARIBBEAN SEA - OCTOBER 3: In this NOAA handout image, taken by the GOES satellite at 1620 UTC shows Hurricane Matthew in the Caribbean Sea heading towards Jamacia, Haiti and Cuba on October 3, 2016. Matthew is a strong Category 4 hurricane, in the central Caribbean Sea and is poised to deliver a potentially catastrophic strike on Haiti.  (Photo by NOAA via Getty Images)

Hurricane Matthew in the Caribbean Sea heading towards Jamaica, Haiti and Cuba on October 3, 2016. Now it’s nearing Florida. (Getty)

The National Hurricane Center’s website is currently down due to DNS errors at www.nhc.noaa.gov, as of midnight Eastern. At midnight, the National Weather Service posted on Twitter about the connectivity issue, stating that it was due to a technical issue at the WOC, which is being looked at but an estimated fix time isn’t known. However, you can still see the 11 p.m. Eastern advisory for Hurricane Matthew, along with other advisories, even while the NHC’s site is down. The NHC is still posting updates on Twitter here. If you would like to still try to access the website by going around the DNS issues, some storm watchers have reported success following Google’s Public DNS advice at this link.

Here’s the advisory for 11 p.m. Eastern. First, the five-day cone graphic for 11 p.m. October 6:

You can read the public advisory for 11 p.m. here.

The 11 p.m. Forecast/Advisory is here.

A discussion is here.

And wind speed probabilities are here.

The NHC also released its 12 am October 7 update on Twitter below: