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Another hurrican heading for SE USA!

48 replies

Hulababy · 31/08/2004 22:36

Another big, powerful hurricane is currently heading towards the SE of USA! Third one recently. Last one - Charley - caused enough damage and 20 odd deaths.

OP posts:
bran · 06/09/2004 14:55

Well, hopefully after the next one you'll have used up 5 years worth of hurricanes, so you'll have 4 years of no hurricanes at all .

JanH · 06/09/2004 15:15

According to Gov Jeb, Florida is playing catch-up after a few quiet years:

Hope you get a couple more quiet years now, Kate! (Hope Ivan doesn't get too big too.)

kkgirl · 06/09/2004 22:49

Kate

I don't know exactly where my friend was staying. I think I will try his home phone number tomorrow and see if he is back.

Aero · 06/09/2004 23:37

Thanks for all the info Kate. MY brother is among the 3million who've lost power, despite going inland, but we've heard from him and they're fine. Not sure how long his cell phone battery will last though!

Aero · 06/09/2004 23:38

Sorry - didn't mean to shout 'my'!!!

KateandtheGirls · 07/09/2004 22:51

Hurricane Ivan could be heading our way.

Unbelievable!

KateandtheGirls · 09/09/2004 21:16

The latest on Hurricane Ivan.

Aero · 09/09/2004 21:20

Poor you Kate - do you think you'll be evacuated?

bran · 09/09/2004 21:21

Hope you and your family come through with mimimum damage Kate. Are you all prepared and stocked up with groceries?

KateandtheGirls · 09/09/2004 21:24

Too early to tell if we'll be evacuated. I certainly hope not. We live in a new, solid, house which is away from the water, so if we are evacuated eveyone in the whole of the Tampa Bay area will be evacuated. Having said that, if some of my neighbours, and especially my sil, leave voluntarily we probably will too.

I have quite a lot of supplies in (from the last 2 hurricanes!), but mostly I have been trying to get ready for my daughter's 5th birthday which is on Saturday. If it keeps heading towards us Sunday might be a busy day getting prepared.

Aero · 09/09/2004 21:28

Will be thinking of you over the weekend. Keep us posted and hope the party(if that's what you're planning) can go ahead uninterupted! Fingers crossed all will be ok!

sunchowder · 09/09/2004 22:16

We kept our boards up. I am getting used to not having any power. I need antidepressants though!! The latest 5 day track showed it going up through the state, they are evacuating Key West today. We were without power for 3 days this time with Francis, which is great compared with most.

KateandtheGirls · 09/09/2004 22:50

Sunchowder, we were incredibly lucky with Frances and didn't lose power. I don't know if we'll be so lucky next time.

Hulababy · 10/09/2004 17:22

Fingers crossed for you all over there. Must be horrible living with all this fopr the past few weeks.

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Aero · 27/09/2004 13:42

Kate - do you have any info on how things are at the moment - my brother has re-loacted again, and I wasn't able to reach him on his cell phone. Will assume they're ok but Port St Lucie was right in the path of the storm apparantly? He didn't go inland this time, but is staying with friends locally who have a generator. He's basically fed up of living out of a suitcase!
Coming from N Ireland, he's used to rubbish weather, but nothing like this!! Would be grateful if you know anything.

KateandtheGirls · 27/09/2004 13:49

Yes it did hit right by Port St Lucie again, just like Frances. He'll be fine, but I would assume that he doesn't have a signal on his cell phone. I bet he's pretty happy to be with friends with a generator because it looks like almost the whole of that area lost power. Here's an article from today's New York Times.

BAREFOOT BAY, Fla., Sept. 26 - Hurricane Jeanne delivered walls of stinging rain and winds of up to 120 miles an hour as it spun across Florida on Sunday, making landfall almost exactly where Hurricane Frances did over Labor Day weekend and waging the third assault in six weeks on the state's sodden midsection.

The storm caused at least five deaths, including a man who was electrocuted touching a downed power line in Miami. A man and woman were killed, officials said, when their sport utility vehicle plunged into a canal beside the Sawgrass Expressway, near Deerfield Beach.

A man drowned in Palm Bay when his pickup truck was submerged and a boy, 15, died after he was pinned by a falling tree in Clay County, southwest of Jacksonville, The Associated Press said.

The storm was also responsible for more than 1,500 deaths in grievous flooding in Haiti, 24 deaths in the Dominican Republic and 7 in Puerto Rico before it moved over the Bahamas and into Florida.

While widespread, the storm's damage in Florida did not appear as catastrophic as that after Hurricane Charley, which devastated parts of southwest and central Florida on Aug. 13, and Hurricane Ivan, which brutalized the Pensacola region on Sept. 17.

Flooding was perhaps the biggest problem, after hours of heavy rainfall in areas already saturated by past storms. Roofs and siding, possibly weakened by the last hurricane, flew off or sprang leaks, and piles of old storm debris went flying.

The storm, then classified as a Category 3 hurricane, made landfall on Hutchinson Island, just south of Fort Pierce, shortly before midnight, when the sky had an eerie blue cast caused by transformer explosions. It moved northwesterly across the state, lashing inland agricultural regions that had already suffered mightily and weakening to a tropical storm as it turned north toward Georgia. By late Sunday night, its maximum sustained winds had dropped to 50 m.p.h.

With its arrival, Florida became the first state to experience four hurricanes in a season since Texas in 1886, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Eqecat, a California company specializing in risk evaluation, estimated the damage to insured property was $6 billion to $14 billion. The previous three storms, which were blamed for at least 70 deaths, caused tens of billions of dollars in damage.

"This is unprecedented; there's been nothing like it," Gov. Jeb Bush said as he visited the emergency operations center in St. Lucie County, adding that the relief effort for the combined storms was the largest in the Federal Emergency Management Agency's history. "Certainly it's the largest series of natural disasters we've faced."

More than 1.5 million customers in 38 counties lacked electricity after Hurricane Jeanne came through, state officials said, though some power failures were from earlier storms. Shelters were housing about 61,000 residents, only a fraction of the two million who were urged to evacuate coastal areas.

Many said that after relocating weeks earlier, they could not bear the stress of moving again to a shelter or hotel and leaving their property and pets unattended.

Julie Monti, 86, said she stayed at home in Micco, about 30 miles north of Fort Pierce, because a shelter would not have welcomed her sickly dog. While she huddled in a closet overnight, the hurricane peeled the roof and walls off the second floor of her house, leaving a soaked tangle of furniture and a lonely looking fireplace.

"I tried to get a state trooper on the highway to help today," she said. "He told me, 'Lady, you're lucky you're alive, there's people trapped in houses.' "

Mrs. Monti said she had owned the house for years but had just moved full time in July, after selling her other home, in Stanhope, N.J. She does not have insurance, she said. She was trying to cover blown-out windows with tarp, unsteady on a slippery foot stool as the rain began to fall again. Her yard was a sea of broken lawn statues: gnomes, flamingos, dolphins, goddesses.

She said she had tried to call FEMA four times after Hurricane Frances, which damaged a building in back of her house, but could not get through.

"Look at my furniture up there," she said, her voice quavering as she surveyed the wreckage with brimming eyes. "I want to go back to Jersey."

Just up Route 1 in Barefoot Bay, a community of 5,000 manufactured homes that Hurricane Jeanne hit especially hard, Charles Sweeney, 71, was trying to determine which damage was new and which was old.

"Half of this was Frances," he said, pointing to a roofless, screenless porch, "and the rest, all the way through the back, was Jeanne."

In the Tampa Bay area, which had not expected to be in the storm's path (until late Saturday, most forecasts had that predicted it would move straight up the state's east coast or only slightly to the west), many residents were unprepared as the wind arrived on Sunday afternoon.

"We don't even have groceries this time," said Laura Keane of St. Petersburg. "We did so much the other two or three times. This time we didn't do anything. It was like, huh, oh, well."

In Polk County, where the storm's eye, surrounded by the strongest winds, passed over the most populous areas, Cindy Rodriguez, a spokeswoman for the county emergency management office, said several trailer parks were in terrible shape.

"It looks like tarp city out there," Ms. Rodriguez said. "All these tarps that were on the roofs damaged by Charley are now floating down the streets."

The small town of Mulberry lost use of its wastewater treatment plant during the storm, she said, which caused sewage to pour onto streets. She said that before Hurricane Jeanne arrived there had been a good deal of denial in Polk County, which she said was the only county in the direct path of three hurricanes.

"We think, 'It can't possibly hit here again,' '' Ms. Rodriguez said.

More than 3,500 National Guard troops were supervising recovery from Hurricanes Frances, Ivan and Jeanne on Sunday, and Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco of Louisiana approved a request from Gov. Bush to send about 200 additional troops from her state to Florida.

As the storm churned north, many people admitted to feeling numb in its wake, and the wake of three others. And they were well aware that hurricane season is far from over.

"Every single weekend I think, 'Oh my God, I've got to sit through another one of these,' '' said Eden Healt, 33, of Tampa. "You get mentally tired and emotionally and physically, just tired. Like a zombie going through your day."

Across the state in Micco, Mrs. Monti stopped sweeping her eyes across the wreckage of her house and yard and focused on a piece of siding on the ground. She picked it up and gently set it on a birdbath. Then she shuffled back inside.

Aero · 27/09/2004 13:53

Thanks v much Kate - you're a diamond - will read through that now. I'm pretty sure he'll have lost power, signal etc.

bonniej · 27/09/2004 13:55

Kateandthegirls, my sister and family live in the Bahamas. We spoke just before hurricane jeanne hit but i haven't been able to get hold of her since. She lives on the Abaco islands which is where it hit. I've put on the news but they don't say much about how bad it hit the Bahamas. Do you know if there were any casualties there? I'm sure she's ok, but would set my mind at rest.

KateandtheGirls · 27/09/2004 14:00

I haven't heard of any casualtie in the Bahamas, so hopefully no news is good news.

I just found this article. "There were no reports of deaths or serious injuries."

I hope you hear from your sister soon and that she is OK.

vict17 · 27/09/2004 14:01

Hi Kate - my friend is due to fly out to Miami on Wednesday. Do you think she'll still be able to go? (sorry carp at geography)

KateandtheGirls · 27/09/2004 14:04

Oh yeah, vict. I think Miami pretty much missed it anyway (Miami is further south), and the weather even this morning is fine and sunny here in Tampa where just 18 hours ago we were in the middle of a hurricane.

bonniej · 27/09/2004 14:05

Thank you so much kateandthegirls. That made me feel a lot better. She only emigrated a month ago and has been through two hurricanes already. The first house they moved into was so badly damaged by hurricane frances they are now staying with friends on Marsh Harbour. I really feel for all you people in Florida and surrounding areas having gone through this four times now . Hope things get back to normal for you all as soon as possible.

KateandtheGirls · 27/09/2004 14:25

What made her move there? OK, maybe I should rephrase the question. I can perfectly understand why she would want to move there (hurricanes notwithstanding), but was it a job, etc?

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