General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsI've lived on a barrier island on the Gulf of Mexico for fifty-four years. I've experienced so many hurricanes ...
that I have actually lost count. Most were near misses, two were direct hits.
The first one hit us with its NE quadrant and imbedded tornadoes. A house or condo on this side of the street was completely destroyed while the one across the street was undamaged. As part of an after event survey, we estimated 45% of structures in town suffered major damage, all from wind and very little water damage.
The second one went just north of us. We still got 120 mph winds. But the counter clockwise rotation gave us west winds, blowing the water out of the bay to our west and over our island. It was a 12 surge which meant a lot (A Lot) of homes had 3 of saltwater in them.
Our Island is only accessible by a ferry in the north and a causeway bridge to the south. The ferries cant operate when the water level gets 3 higher and they have to leave in time to protect the crews and seek safe harbor. Population growth causes congestion on the lone highway to the south. If you wait too long to evacuate, you cant.
Before, we really didnt know where the storms were going and evacuated many times, relieved to see the storm turn and miss us. But we always evacuated because you cant get out if you wait too long and conditions will be unlivable if its a direct hit. Its hot and humid, with no power, no water, no sewer, no ice, and no screens in your windows, but plenty of mosquitoes hatching from all the rain.
We are fortunate that we can afford a hotel inland, sometimes way inland as the closer ones are full. But if its forecast to be close, we always evacuate. Even if our house survives the storm, as it did in that second one because were on high ground, there will be no electricity and you will be miserable.
Friends whove stayed usually do so out of machismo. They can tell people they rode one out. But after that second one, when they were in the dark and in waist deep water inside their house and its still rising and the howling wind gives you the worst headache youve ever had , youll have second thoughts. Those tough guys that rode out that second one said theyd never do it again.
Just my thoughts.
Good luck to the people suffering from Helene and to those in the path of Milton.
Peace
rzemanfl
(31,133 posts)All the ruined household stuff piled at the curbs is going to be a big problem when the hurricane hits. I will be gone.
surfered
(11,559 posts)Until the household possessions ended up on the street beds, sofas, washing machines, refrigerators mattresses, etc. soon to be followed by carpet and the drywall.
rzemanfl
(31,133 posts)Last edited Sun Oct 6, 2024, 04:16 PM - Edit history (1)
The subdivision dates back to the mid-fifties. Lived there from 1996-2022. Got water in the garage, but never in the house.
Cheezoholic
(3,535 posts)Is being lost in the Fog of Disaster coverage. You'd think the highest storm surge in 100 years in 2 of the most populated counties in FL would get more coverage and awareness. Smart to run if your close to the water. It sucks. Part of the reason I left. Good Luck!
Peace and Carrots
malaise
(292,858 posts)Post hurricane garbage is as big a disaster
Stay safe
surfered
(11,559 posts)Pile the garbage on a site. It was a huge stack. Locals called it Mt Trashmore
highplainsdem
(60,037 posts)Hope the damge from Milton won't be as bad.
rzemanfl
(31,133 posts)misanthrope
(9,380 posts)Over my decades in Mobile, I've noticed a character assessment adjoining the sentiment that, "We don't leave for hurricanes." It is almost as if it is a hallmark of their membership in the community, something that "REAL Mobilians" just do not do.
nolabear
(43,849 posts)I grew up in Biloxi, Pascagoula and Gautier. My grandfather was one of those hardheaded who stayed during Camille. We who got through that were horrified at the hurricane party and stubborn individualist crowd. Katrina as you know was a drowning. But it seems to have taught some people. On the other hand theres a high rise apartment building on the beach in, I think, Gulfport that has a curved front, presumably to keep the wind from destroying it. I wouldnt stay on a bet.
twodogsbarking
(17,582 posts)The Madcap
(1,751 posts)Last edited Mon Oct 7, 2024, 05:30 PM - Edit history (1)
It's almost guaranteed that you'll face at least one of these storms, and it sort of goes with t he territory. The thing with Helene that's so tragic is that inland it was such a freak event that no one could have anticipated more than a few days in advance. Not enough time to fill sandbags, buy flood insurance, etc.
niyad
(129,586 posts)markodochartaigh
(5,036 posts)Galveston hurricane in 1900. Hearing her stories was enough for me. When I retired to Florida I checked the FEMA flood maps and found a place at the highest elevation in the area and 15 miles inland. It is definitely colder, frost has nipped my mango trees, but even after Irma went directly overhead there was no standing water within a hundred feet of my house.
Phoenix61
(18,706 posts)Ill ride a Cat I-II out. Im on fairly high ground and there is a bay and a barrier island between me and the Gulf. Im out of here for anything over a two. As mentioned, no electric, water or sewer is difficult. Since theres no power there arent any working traffic signals either so driving is a risky proposition.
pecosbob
(8,311 posts)Had more than forty family members in the Houston area at one time. Eventually we all headed for higher ground. Now I live in the Mohave Desert.