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Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by tom169
(Post 12332897)
Okay please forgive my ignorance, but as a recent resident of the USA, is this normal?
Smaller hurricanes (Category 1 and 2, and the odd Category 3) do come and go but rarely cause much damage other than inconvenience. Category 4 and 5 hurricanes will only hit a particular place every 20-40 years. So, people go through the smaller hurricanes, think a 4 or a 5 will just be a bit more rain and a bit more wind, and under-prepare and under-react. Those of you still in South Florida: I advise you to get a very good PAPER or PLASTIC road map. If it hits as a 4 or a 5, many of the unconscious neighbourhood markers you are used to seeing and using to find your way around - street signs, certain trees, a neighbour's distinctive fence - could well be gone and you may get hopelessly lost in a place you've lived for 10 years. This happened quite a bit after Hurricane Andrew. Downloading a map on your phone may not work if you run out of battery and there isn't electricity yet. Having a map means you can count off streets to your house from a main arterial and find your direction that way. As well, the poster who mentioned packing tape on the windows - supposedly the effect is that, while it won't stop the window from breaking, it will keep the broken pieces in fairly large bits (so, no shattering into a thousand pieces). I have never bothered with that though - it is a pain to get the tape off unbroken windows. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by Rete
(Post 12332942)
Hurricane Andrew wiped the city of Homestead off the map in Southern Florida back in 1992. It has since been rebuilt and will again take a direct hit from a category 5 hurricane. This time one of my former co-workers is living there with her husband and 2 children. Hope they have left for New York.
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Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by Boiler
(Post 12332948)
I remember reading the history of the area, was essentially bypassed until the 1920's, prior to that most of the population lived in the far north, can not help thinking there was a reason.
Flagler intended South Florida to be a resort for northeasterners, but it just grew and grew and grew. That is also why "The South" effectively stops at Orlando - northerners were the ones who came to South Florida because of the railroad. It wasn't built to give South Florida connectivity with "southern" cities like Atlanta etc. People couldn't forecast hurricanes back then and when they hit, it was a total surprise. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
British government statement this morning -
"No British nationals have yet contacted us to ask for assistance." (Foreign Office minister Alan Duncan, in the House of Commons.) Great, so the British response has been totally satisfactory so far! |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by jeepster
(Post 12332940)
...of course
Or you could just sulk. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by carcajou
(Post 12333190)
Not this size, no. Hurricanes like Irma are once-in-a-generation, which as I stated will be part of the problem.
As well, the poster who mentioned packing tape on the windows - supposedly the effect is that, while it won't stop the window from breaking, it will keep the broken pieces in fairly large bits (so, no shattering into a thousand pieces). I have never bothered with that though - it is a pain to get the tape off unbroken windows. Satnav is THE solution to getting about so long as roads are generally passable, itll show the options better. Re tape on windows, the preferred solution is to have sheets of thin explosafe plastic stuck to the windows - not at the time of course - - bit like tinting on a car but its very strong polycarbon film. Sticks the bits together even if it breaks. Also of course double glazed windows are 3-5 times stronger as the cushion of gas inside absorbs a lot of energy. Here we dont see many in theory, 12 degrees N is considered south of the belt for insurance purposes. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by robin1234
(Post 12333220)
British government statement this morning -
"No British nationals have yet contacted us to ask for assistance." (Foreign Office minister Alan Duncan, in the House of Commons.) Great, so the British response has been totally satisfactory so far! |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by chawkins99
(Post 12332483)
The flight is with Thomas Cook direct from Orlando to Manchester and is non-refundable. Flying from elsewhere would cost more money.
We originally booked for myself and wife to go for Christmas but I used my ticket in April when my father was taken ill. I rebooked for next week just so the ticket wasn't wasted. I could re-schedule it for later but they charge £100 re-booking fee. I'm hoping that by Friday, they will allow me to change it FOC (that's what they're doing for Caribbean flights at the moment). Result! :thumbsup: |
Re: Hurricane Irma
GA is beginning to take things seriously, we in NE GA are starting to receive patients evacuated from the Brunswick/Savannah area.
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Re: Hurricane Irma
Well, lots of people are at work today. It appears a lot of my colleagues are staying put, figuring they have supplies, shutters, and strapped roofs.
Lots of people are worried about having to make a long drive without guarantees of being able to get gasoline, so they don't want to get stuck on the road. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by anotherlimey
(Post 12333326)
Well, lots of people are at work today. It appears a lot of my colleagues are staying put, figuring they have supplies, shutters, and strapped roofs.
Lots of people are worried about having to make a long drive without guarantees of being able to get gasoline, so they don't want to get stuck on the road. On TV yesterday it showed a guy with a pick up truck...the back was full of gas containers. He was filling them up for the journey. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
We've been running out of gas and water since Monday up here and we're on the least likely side of FL to get anything that destructive. Schools are shut to be used as shelters, so my son is pretty happy about that. :lol:
This is the first real big storm that's come our way since I came in 2006, so I've had a good run. Ready to invest in storm shutters after this though, the sound of things hitting windows last year during Matthew was mildly disconcerting but something the size of Irma could easily blow out the windows, never mind just throwing debris at them. I hope people in Miami and elsewhere in SE Florida are able to leave quickly enough or find rock solid structures to shelter in, this is no storm to mess around with. Leave now, or dig in. Indecision is dangerous. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
Originally Posted by Jerseygirl
(Post 12333329)
I heard cars and gas stations were running out of gas. I-95 looks like a nightmare. I wonder how long it would take to get from Miami to the state line with traffic crawling along?
On TV yesterday it showed a guy with a pick up truck...the back was full of gas containers. He was filling them up for the journey. |
Re: Hurricane Irma
We are probably going to be told to evacuate by Saturday at the latest. My neighbor has been putting hurricane shutters up all day. We have plywood that we are going to put over all the windows and the glass doors in our dining room that go out to the backyard. My kids' school is closed until at least Wednesday. I am going to pick up sandbags tomorrow, and now that my kids are off school they can help me.
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Re: Hurricane Irma
Spoke with my bro-in-law in Florida yesterday. They live on the Gulf Coast 40 miles north of Fort Myers.
He didn't see the sense in getting stuck in a traffic jam and then being hit by the storm. The local high school is next to their home and it will be open as a shelter. |
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