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ancianita

(35,895 posts)
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:19 PM Sep 2022

Ian is driving me out of Florida.

Last edited Wed Sep 28, 2022, 06:39 PM - Edit history (1)

125 mph winds. Not much to be optimistic about.

Battened down the outside of the house. Have ten extra gallons of gas in the trunk. If I leave in the AM, I think I can beat the traffic rush on Tuesday, because once it starts raining it will be a pain in the neck to escape this state. Heading to Alabama, which is an hour away from Tallahassee. It's at least on higher ground. I think I don’t want to go through this particular hurricane in a double wide by a lake. The car’s packed with all I’d still need to get by with just in case the whole house gets totaled. Cuz ya nevah know.

And as the saying goes, I don't want to go through things that don't kill me but make me stronger anymore. Especially in a DeSantis state.

With any luck I'll come back in a few days to an intact house, a standing backyard tree, and start again. Love y'all.


EDIT: See updates labeled below.

122 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Ian is driving me out of Florida. (Original Post) ancianita Sep 2022 OP
good luck...suddenly blizzards up north do not seem so bad dembotoz Sep 2022 #1
I was thinking the same thing mgardener Sep 2022 #83
The winters are moderating in Michigan. roamer65 Sep 2022 #122
Wishing you the best of luck. Keep us updated Walleye Sep 2022 #2
Stay safe PJMcK Sep 2022 #3
Let us know when you get back. Polly Hennessey Sep 2022 #4
Best of luck! Gaugamela Sep 2022 #5
Never go through a hurricane in a trailer. Phoenix61 Sep 2022 #6
I don't think people realize just how bad Michael was.. Deuxcents Sep 2022 #89
No they don't and there's a reason for that. Phoenix61 Sep 2022 #92
Take care, ancianita blm Sep 2022 #7
Be careful and stay safe. Good luck to you. LoisB Sep 2022 #8
Be safe. TigressDem Sep 2022 #9
You're smart to get going early. GoodRaisin Sep 2022 #10
A sincere good luck wish to you. Stinky The Clown Sep 2022 #11
Ehh, is Alabama a good place to evacuate to? W_HAMILTON Sep 2022 #12
Coastal storm surge is the issue LeftInTX Sep 2022 #64
Best of luck!!! bluboid Sep 2022 #13
I'm glad you're leaving mountain grammy Sep 2022 #14
My sister lives close by you, in the Monticello/Lloyd area. Laffy Kat Sep 2022 #15
Smart decision. Stay safe and well. wnylib Sep 2022 #16
Good luck!!! Just think, could be worse? In TX? Tossup Laura PourMeADrink Sep 2022 #17
Stay safe and keep us posted. Solly Mack Sep 2022 #18
If Ian's driving, make sure he ain't hittin' the sauce. Hermit-The-Prog Sep 2022 #19
you're lucky, at least you can leave. William769 Sep 2022 #20
I hope you stay safe, Bill brer cat Sep 2022 #41
Prayers with you, Bill. yardwork Sep 2022 #50
Get better soon. Joinfortmill Sep 2022 #58
I'm sorry.... LeftInTX Sep 2022 #66
Man, when it rains it pours... BigmanPigman Sep 2022 #93
Sounds like you already are lucky, since you're going to get good care. ancianita Sep 2022 #112
Sounds like you already are lucky, since you're going to get good care. ancianita Sep 2022 #113
I hope everything goes your way, ancianita. You will be in my thoughts. littlemissmartypants Sep 2022 #21
Smart that you are are organized and prepared. Please stay safe, and stay in touch niyad Sep 2022 #22
Fingers crossed for you! MLAA Sep 2022 #23
11pm update just in, tracking east, Tampa Bay in right front quadrant, not where anyone needs to be Shanti Shanti Shanti Sep 2022 #24
I hear you. tosh Sep 2022 #25
My daughter and SIL live just north of Sarasota SlimJimmy Sep 2022 #26
I would say a bit early tavernier Sep 2022 #27
Stay safe my friend. Please keep us posted on events in your neck of the woods. alwaysinasnit Sep 2022 #28
Oh shit! Few places are safe from any natural disaster these days. TeamProg Sep 2022 #29
Very wise. Hoping for the best for you. pnwest Sep 2022 #30
Good Luck! Jay25 Sep 2022 #31
The Very Best of Luck with Cha Sep 2022 #32
Safe journey SilasSouleII Sep 2022 #33
Maybe DeSantis will fly ya'll to Massachusetts stollen Sep 2022 #34
Good luck LetMyPeopleVote Sep 2022 #35
You're making a smart Dorian Gray Sep 2022 #36
Take care malaise Sep 2022 #37
Good luck! Emile Sep 2022 #38
Digitize all your photos. At least take a picture w phone of most sentimental ones & backup to cloud Bernardo de La Paz Sep 2022 #39
Best of luck!!! I'm out of the country, can't do anything but hope at this point. CaptainTruth Sep 2022 #40
(((Sending my hopes that you will get through this okay))) BumRushDaShow Sep 2022 #42
(( Back to you, too. )) ancianita Sep 2022 #68
I had just posted about Irma in the LBN thread BumRushDaShow Sep 2022 #70
Good luck, prayers,goodwishes for an intact house and tree ... Demsrule86 Sep 2022 #43
Good Luck, Stay Safe! electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #44
Good luck and drive safely Old Crank Sep 2022 #45
Many DU'ers will be watching for your next updates. You're not exactly alone! Judi Lynn Sep 2022 #46
Best of luck to you. (nt) Paladin Sep 2022 #47
Good luck! mgardener Sep 2022 #48
Good luck to you! lark Sep 2022 #49
Sounds like you've planned well. Prayers for your safety. yardwork Sep 2022 #51
You may be at your destination or nearing it by now. Hope so. Hortensis Sep 2022 #52
Good move! IrishAfricanAmerican Sep 2022 #53
Safe travels, ancianita Niagara Sep 2022 #54
stay safe..travel with care. dawn5651 Sep 2022 #55
Stay safe. Give us updates. Joinfortmill Sep 2022 #56
Wise decision. mia Sep 2022 #57
Sending you all the best. hamsterjill Sep 2022 #59
I'd consider DownriverDem Sep 2022 #60
I hear ya. Crazy to think one Democratic voter could make a difference, right? But ancianita Sep 2022 #76
Good luck, ancianita... rubbersole Sep 2022 #61
Best of luck! They don't call it the plywood state for nothing. LeftInTX Sep 2022 #62
Good luck, Ancianita! cilla4progress Sep 2022 #63
Good luck to you, ancianita! Greybnk48 Sep 2022 #65
MADE IT -- outside the cone of probable paths! Your spirit and love got me here! THANK YOU! ancianita Sep 2022 #67
Good timing! They just ordered mandatory evacs for Hillsborough County Zone A Shanti Shanti Shanti Sep 2022 #69
Evacuating is smart. Evacuating all at the same time is dumb. It's all about the head start. ancianita Sep 2022 #73
But is it outside the Trump Sharpie line? Nevilledog Sep 2022 #71
I am glad that you are safe LetMyPeopleVote Sep 2022 #74
Smart move. mercuryblues Sep 2022 #72
You've got a reasonable and prudent plan. SYFROYH Sep 2022 #75
Take care of you. Snackshack Sep 2022 #77
Best of luck to you! This always sucks. dchill Sep 2022 #78
Yikes - hang tight! calimary Sep 2022 #79
Oh, man Sugarcoated Sep 2022 #80
Thank you, but really, it's all good on my end. I just worry about those who waited to be told ancianita Sep 2022 #82
This message was self-deleted by its author LetMyPeopleVote Sep 2022 #81
McDill Air Force Base just got totally evacuated. It sits on a little peninsula of Tampa Bay. ancianita Sep 2022 #84
Please be safe. HillbillyDaoist Sep 2022 #85
Oh, I promise, I'm safe as can be. I'm in another state away from the cone of Ian's possible paths. ancianita Sep 2022 #86
Wishing you safe travels Ruby the Liberal Sep 2022 #87
Take care and don't drive through standing water. jaxexpat Sep 2022 #88
Thanks. You nailed it. And for weeks, since there's so little ground above sea level, ancianita Sep 2022 #98
Traveling mercies. nt duhneece Sep 2022 #90
Go to Alabama. Georgia is full of half-backs who... UGADawg Sep 2022 #91
Haha good one! ancianita Sep 2022 #99
One of those evacuations True Blue American Sep 2022 #94
Stay safe is key BaeBnakes99 Sep 2022 #95
Thanks. And thanks for the tip; I'll definitely check out Tropical Tidbits. ancianita Sep 2022 #100
You stay safe, 'ya hear! SergeStorms Sep 2022 #96
Will do, Serge! ancianita Sep 2022 #101
I've driven through Dothan... SergeStorms Sep 2022 #104
Best wishes and hope all will be OK. Evolve Dammit Sep 2022 #97
Thanks, ED. It will. Either that, or I hit the road again and turn nomad! ancianita Sep 2022 #102
That has a ring to it! Evolve Dammit Sep 2022 #108
All the best intrepid Floridian, safe travels & check in when you can.. appalachiablue Sep 2022 #103
Thank you, appalachiablue. I've got nothing but time to check in, now that I've escaped, to ancianita Sep 2022 #105
Look at the Tampa traffic LetMyPeopleVote Sep 2022 #106
Wow, thanks! It looks like a collective stupidity born of desperation. But I-4 just heads east ancianita Sep 2022 #107
Stay safe and please update us when you return home. NT akbacchus_BC Sep 2022 #109
Will do. ancianita Sep 2022 #110
Good choice and GOOD LUCK!! bluestarone Sep 2022 #111
Thanks. Luck is holding. I get to stay at this hotel in Dothan as long as I need to. ancianita Sep 2022 #114
UPDATE: Florida Power and Light reports that it has outages with 58 towns reporting. ancianita Sep 2022 #115
Great news malaise Sep 2022 #116
Thanks, mal. Millions are suffering in FL right now. I count myself a fortunate smart cookie. ancianita Sep 2022 #117
You sized up the situation and took decisive action malaise Sep 2022 #118
UPDATE: Good news. ancianita Sep 2022 #119
So glad to hear you're doing okay and still have power, ancianita! crickets Sep 2022 #120
Thank you! DU really helped me get through this. I love this place! Ever my home when I'm away from ancianita Sep 2022 #121

roamer65

(36,744 posts)
122. The winters are moderating in Michigan.
Thu Sep 29, 2022, 12:25 AM
Sep 2022

Last winter, the only bad months were January and February.

Another 20 years and our winters will be like those of present day Tennessee.

Walleye

(30,908 posts)
2. Wishing you the best of luck. Keep us updated
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:23 PM
Sep 2022

I know what you mean. Lately for me the things that don’t kill me just hurt like hell

Phoenix61

(16,990 posts)
6. Never go through a hurricane in a trailer.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:28 PM
Sep 2022

Long story but I’m in Jax and my house is in the Panhandle. Not happy but I battened it down as best I could. It made it through Micheal and there aren’t any trees left near it so it should be fine.

Phoenix61

(16,990 posts)
92. No they don't and there's a reason for that.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 06:22 PM
Sep 2022

Bay County, where Michael hit, pushed out the message that Panama City Beach was great and open for business and it was. County officials were afraid if the media accurately reported that from Panama City to Port St Joe was devastated people would cancel reservations on the beach and they would lose a bunch of money. Because of that decision the story got buried.

TigressDem

(5,125 posts)
9. Be safe.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:33 PM
Sep 2022

Hope people manage to get through this and vote the idiots out that make is so difficult to live there.

GoodRaisin

(8,900 posts)
10. You're smart to get going early.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:38 PM
Sep 2022

I wouldn't stay for 125 mph winds either. I live in eastern NC and have felt wind gusts around 100 mph before and my 2 story house was shaking. Good luck with the storm.

W_HAMILTON

(7,828 posts)
12. Ehh, is Alabama a good place to evacuate to?
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:45 PM
Sep 2022

Couldn't it conceivably still take a somewhat direct hit? Even though I guess if you go far enough inland in Alabama, it might not be too bad even if it did suffer more of a direct hit...

LeftInTX

(25,030 posts)
64. Coastal storm surge is the issue
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 10:48 AM
Sep 2022

Even being 20 miles inland is a huge difference. Alabama will be fine.

However, local evacuations get crowded. Best to get out now.

However, just the process of evacuation is not without risk. More people died from trying to evacuate during Hurricane Rita than Rita. Vehicles ran out of gas. It was 100 degrees. People collapsed from heat exhaustion. After Rita, they set up evacuation zones for low lying areas, rather trying to move 6 million people across the state.


** Storm evacuees stand on the side of Highway 290 that became a parking lot as people attempt to flee the approach of Hurricane Rita in Houston on Thursday, Sept. 22, 2005. State and local officials have taken a beating for waiting until millions of Hurricane Rita evacuees had been trapped in gridlock for more than 24 hours before they opened Houston's major highways to one-way outbound traffic. But the Texas Department of Transportation says it wasn't easy to convert 487 miles of highway, including two interstates, to one-way traffic. (AP Photo/Ron Heflin, File)


During the evacuation from
Hurricane Rita, many vehicles, such as these on the side of Interstate 45 in Huntsville, either broke down or ran out of gasoline.









12 years ago Hurricane Rita made us all lose our minds in Houston
The worst traffic jam in Houston history began 12 years ago today

https://www.chron.com/news/houston-weather/hurricanes/article/Hurricane-Rita-9236850.php#photo-5228604
Thousands who evacuated from the Bayou City would have been better off if they had just stayed home, made a batch of margaritas and watched TV.


This is what they say about hurricanes:
Run from the water. Hunker down from the wind.
I don't know how this applies to mobile homes. I would get out. Local shelters are usually good even in Florida because they are inland.


Wind from hurricanes rarely kills
Storm surge is deadly and extremely damaging.

Spin off flooding from rain and tornados are often an inland issue. However, this is always a risk and can happen as far north as Ohio.

mountain grammy

(26,594 posts)
14. I'm glad you're leaving
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:47 PM
Sep 2022

You’ll be in my thoughts. Stay safe and good luck. Hoping for the best and that you’re home soon.

Laffy Kat

(16,366 posts)
15. My sister lives close by you, in the Monticello/Lloyd area.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 10:58 PM
Sep 2022

They are prepping although they won't leave. It worries me because they are rural and surrounded by trees. Even though they aren't on the coast, they still get tornadoes that spawn off the storm. She just left Colorado, visiting me. I wish she had stayed longer.

I'm glad you're leaving. It's smart.

Hermit-The-Prog

(33,227 posts)
19. If Ian's driving, make sure he ain't hittin' the sauce.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:07 PM
Sep 2022

Got a spare room here, if you want to drive 8 or so hours away from Ian. Might be over by the time you turn around and drive back.

William769

(55,139 posts)
20. you're lucky, at least you can leave.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:08 PM
Sep 2022

I am stuck in a rehab center. I have to admit though I do feel safe here although I wished I could walk.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
112. Sounds like you already are lucky, since you're going to get good care.
Tue Sep 27, 2022, 07:12 PM
Sep 2022

Take care, Bill. Please keep us posted.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
113. Sounds like you already are lucky, since you're going to get good care.
Tue Sep 27, 2022, 07:13 PM
Sep 2022

Take care, Bill. Please keep us posted.

littlemissmartypants

(22,504 posts)
21. I hope everything goes your way, ancianita. You will be in my thoughts.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:24 PM
Sep 2022

It's always better to be able to live to tell about it. One hundred twenty five mph winds sounds really scary. I know I couldn't bare it. I think you're definitely making the best decision for the circumstances. It's hard to lose stuff but it's only stuff and you are way more valuable. Good luck! Safe travels! Stay encouraged.



❤️ pants

niyad

(112,946 posts)
22. Smart that you are are organized and prepared. Please stay safe, and stay in touch
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:28 PM
Sep 2022

if you can. You know your DU fmily is here for you.

 

Shanti Shanti Shanti

(12,047 posts)
24. 11pm update just in, tracking east, Tampa Bay in right front quadrant, not where anyone needs to be
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:32 PM
Sep 2022

NHC models seem to be converging a little more, its going to be a shitshow on the highways if it continues along that path

tosh

(4,422 posts)
25. I hear you.
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:36 PM
Sep 2022

I was fully traumatized by H. Michael even though my pets and I evacuated to my ancestral grounds in Georgia. We’re still here.

Be safe, best of luck on the drive and throughout.


SlimJimmy

(3,180 posts)
26. My daughter and SIL live just north of Sarasota
Sun Sep 25, 2022, 11:58 PM
Sep 2022

The are going to hunker down and hope for the best. Not the choice I'd make, but it's up to them.

tavernier

(12,363 posts)
27. I would say a bit early
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:09 AM
Sep 2022

but we found over the years that once you make a plan, stick to it, because hurricanes can change their mind within miles or minutes and then it’s too late to change yours. So good job and good luck and hope when you come back the only thing different is a nice freshly washed trailer.

TeamProg

(6,003 posts)
29. Oh shit! Few places are safe from any natural disaster these days.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:53 AM
Sep 2022

My wife and I have been fire evacuated twice in five years and we also had to live elsewhere for a while when the Mono Winds snapped the 130 ft ponderosa pine in our driveway through our bedroom ceiling at 2:30 am in Jan of 2021. We could’ve been killed. Tree missed us by 7 feet.

Best of luck to you. Stay alive!

Dorian Gray

(13,479 posts)
36. You're making a smart
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 05:14 AM
Sep 2022

decision. Be safe, and hope you come back to an intact home with no flooding or damage. Best to you and your loved ones/friends.

malaise

(268,553 posts)
37. Take care
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 05:25 AM
Sep 2022

I have a good friend who only has to hear about a hurricane warning and she’s on her way to her sister in Georgia.

CaptainTruth

(6,567 posts)
40. Best of luck!!! I'm out of the country, can't do anything but hope at this point.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 05:56 AM
Sep 2022

Thankfully we're on the east coast near Cape Canaveral so our house should be fine but it still makes me nervous that I won't be there to do anything, like hookup & start the generator if we lose power.

Good luck & be safe!!!

BumRushDaShow

(128,244 posts)
42. (((Sending my hopes that you will get through this okay)))
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 06:38 AM
Sep 2022


I have already started texting family down in GA to keep a close eye on this storm since it is an efficient rain-maker, along with the winds. Me and my weather buddies up here also have an eye on it as this area seems to have "a thing" with "I" storms (Isabel, Ivan, Irene, isias, Ida).

I also just found this for up here (probably due to all the rivers and feeder creeks across the state) -

Pennsylvania could be the second-most flooded state in 2022 behind Florida, new study shows

A study from First Street Foundation found that Pennsylvania is at high risk for structural damage from flooding, both from natural and manmade disasters.

By Harrison Cann
March 9, 2022


From Johnstown to the remnants of Hurricane Ida, almost every town in the commonwealth has a flood story. In 1972, the remnants of Hurricane Agnes battered the Harrisburg area, causing more than $13 billion in damage in 2022 dollars and forcing Gov. Milton Shapp to evacuate the governor’s mansion. Just a few years later, Johnstown experienced the third most devastating flood in its history, resulting in 84 deaths and damages totaling $2 billion in 2022 dollars. Then, in 2004, the remnants of Hurricane Ivan swept through central Pennsylvania causing more than $300 million in damages.

While officials at all levels of government have worked to improve flood prevention, mitigation and recovery efforts in the decades since these disasters, a troubling new report indicates that they may still not be ready for what’s to come. A study conducted by the nonprofit research and technology group First Street Foundation analyzing the potential impact of increased flooding has found that the commonwealth trails only Florida for potential structural damage, and that three Pennsylvania cities are at serious risk of office, retail, and residential damage. The foundation’s 4th National Risk Assessment on Climbing Commercial Closures takes into account the potential structural damage, lost days of operation and downstream economic impacts based on current and future estimates of flood hazards.

The analysis, which measured the flood risks and impacts in metropolitan areas, found that Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Harrisburg will face significant damage-related losses, and that Pennsylvania as a whole will see the second-highest aggregate total structural damage costs of $1.22 billion among all states this year. “As flooding severity and frequency changes along with a changing climate, increasing commercial flood risk understanding is especially important,” according to the study. “Understanding the flood risk to commercial markets is crucial to providing communities and policymakers the information needed to guide investment, mitigation, and adaptation.”


Flood Map: The dots represent the model's expectation of flood risk in a given area, with darker dots representing increasing depth, severity, and likelihood of flood. (First Street Foundation)

In the Pittsburgh region, about 36% of all office, retail and multi-unit residential properties are at risk of flooding this year. The region’s total estimated damages amount to nearly $450 million – the third-highest in the nation. Philadelphia, with an estimated $208 million in damages, and Harrisburg, with an estimated $148 million in damages, rank 11th and 15th in the nation, respectively.

(snip)

https://www.cityandstatepa.com/politics/2022/03/pennsylvania-could-be-second-most-flooded-state-2022-behind-florida-new-study-shows/364205/

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
68. (( Back to you, too. ))
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:18 PM
Sep 2022

Speaking of the troublesome I's, let me throw in Irma, which took our house's back porch off in 2017. Now it's built back better and probably will hold the whole house down with Ian.

You know, the PA flooding seems like such a waste. It seems like our recent infrastructure plan could help innovate the moving of water. My oldest son in Newcastle, AU, has mentioned their cistern system, with diversionary flood drains toward them. Fresh water is so valuable now, one would think we'd have devised a way to send water pipelines from cisterns (or some other catch basin system) to drought areas out West, especially red states.

BumRushDaShow

(128,244 posts)
70. I had just posted about Irma in the LBN thread
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:32 PM
Sep 2022
https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1014&pid=2974090

I think we may have had some rain sweep in here from Irma but not like some of the other "I"s that had a path (plus connection with fronts) to throw the remnants up over us.

They have been trying to work on fixing and enhancing the watersheds around the area to do what you are suggesting - for better stormwater management. But I agree that somehow there should be some kind of pipeline - or even something akin to how they are doing the Strategic Petroleum (Oil) reserve and be able to bank it somewhere. It's a difficult thing to think about due to the extreme deficits in parts of the country but we know where the "flood plains" are and taking advantage of that needs to be factored in.

Hell... thousands of years ago, Egyptians figured out the annual cycle of the Nile floods and worked out a way to take advantage of it - and that was a number of millennia before the Aswan dam was built!

I know California as aqueducts to take the snowmelt but perhaps an updated version of that needs to be developed elsewhere.

Old Crank

(3,498 posts)
45. Good luck and drive safely
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 06:58 AM
Sep 2022

Hope things work out.
I looked at some weather predictions. They are all over the map but some indicate what could be a very rapid escalation after Cuba.
Good idea to get out as early as possible.


Judi Lynn

(160,408 posts)
46. Many DU'ers will be watching for your next updates. You're not exactly alone!
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 07:34 AM
Sep 2022

It's a good time to be somewhere else.

Best wishes.

Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
52. You may be at your destination or nearing it by now. Hope so.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 08:36 AM
Sep 2022

I could have written your post almost word for word in your position, including concern for my tree. Chances are very good, of course, that your home will be just fine when you return, but fingers crossed anyway.

hamsterjill

(15,220 posts)
59. Sending you all the best.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 09:37 AM
Sep 2022

Sounds like you have a very rational plan. I am sending you all good vibes, and as is my practice, I will say a prayer. I have several friends who live in Florida, and like you, they are prepping and concerned.

Stay safe.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
76. I hear ya. Crazy to think one Democratic voter could make a difference, right? But
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:41 PM
Sep 2022

here I am, post-COVID exile, slammin' DeSantis and pushing Charlie Crist and Val badass Demings on social media every chance I get.

I hope DU'ers donate to them so us FL Democrats can join y'all in a winning lap!

rubbersole

(6,648 posts)
61. Good luck, ancianita...
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 09:54 AM
Sep 2022

everyone should be fortunate enough to have your wisdom and the means to act on it. We live on the east coast of Florida (New Smyrna area) and are increasingly petrified this time of year. The term "superstorm" is becoming common and has a particularly nasty ring to it. The number of new complacent residents in Florida that have never been through the worst of, or aftermath of, 100+mph winds could be devastating. Please keep us posted on everything...

LeftInTX

(25,030 posts)
62. Best of luck! They don't call it the plywood state for nothing.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 10:23 AM
Sep 2022

Hopefully traffic wasn't bad and that you have accommodations at your destination.



I think DeSantis is worse than any hurricane.....
Will he be pulling one of his Texas stunts during all of this?

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
67. MADE IT -- outside the cone of probable paths! Your spirit and love got me here! THANK YOU!
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:10 PM
Sep 2022

I've been in four major hurricanes in my life -- enough for one lifetime.

Made it to Dothan, Alabama. Pretty little town, where the wind won't get above 20 mph and the land is dry and green. It's a beautiful state, really, and so far, I've met very nice folks and no trumpculties. On the road I counted at least twenty electrical trucks, in groups of 3-5, speeding in the opposite direction toward Florida.

I'll return home when I know there is electricity and the roads aren't jammed.


If you can, fellow Floridians, please share what you experienced, or heard about, since you're at the tip of Ian's spear.
You are tough as nails, because to withstand hours of roaring wind, rain and loud bangs of wreckage will change you.

THANK EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU FOR YOUR CARE AND SUPPORT!

 

Shanti Shanti Shanti

(12,047 posts)
69. Good timing! They just ordered mandatory evacs for Hillsborough County Zone A
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:29 PM
Sep 2022

Tis coming, 2 million people on the road from Tampa metro?, won't be a hotel left in GA


Starting to ramp up...

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
73. Evacuating is smart. Evacuating all at the same time is dumb. It's all about the head start.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 12:36 PM
Sep 2022

I was in Zone D, which didn't call for evacs, but with a house on a lake, and 5" - 10"+ of sky rain and even more in runoff, I knew ducks would probably be swimming in my sloped yard.

That's a scary spinning bucket of water you posted, thanks.

Another question, why would they head to GA when that's the path Ian takes?!
They should be going outside the hurricane cone because, as malaise says, Ian is a whirlpool of cascading water.
When you're trying to drive out of a hurricane path, the greater danger is water.
By Tuesday, alternative routes will get folks out of the state faster than 75 and 95.

Snackshack

(2,541 posts)
77. Take care of you.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 01:29 PM
Sep 2022

Everything else…even sentimental items at the end of the day is just “stuff” and can be replaced…you can’t be.

Sending good vibes your way, hoping as you say you are back in a day or two with an intact house and a standing tree in the backyard.

calimary

(81,040 posts)
79. Yikes - hang tight!
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 01:51 PM
Sep 2022

It's now Monday late morning - and I hope the danger's passed.

I guess I fell asleep last night before I finished this post. Sorry about that.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
82. Thank you, but really, it's all good on my end. I just worry about those who waited to be told
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 03:04 PM
Sep 2022

by "authorities" to evacuate and when they do, today and tomorrow, they'll be running into planetary downpour as they go where they're directed. And will make getting to safety all the more stressful and crazy.

Response to ancianita (Original post)

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
84. McDill Air Force Base just got totally evacuated. It sits on a little peninsula of Tampa Bay.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 03:30 PM
Sep 2022

They'll probably take off by air so as not to add to the glut of traffic.

 

HillbillyDaoist

(93 posts)
85. Please be safe.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 03:49 PM
Sep 2022

So...by using the example trump set, no federal aid should be sent because DeSatan has been mean to Biden. Right?

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
86. Oh, I promise, I'm safe as can be. I'm in another state away from the cone of Ian's possible paths.
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 04:17 PM
Sep 2022

So ... should we stoop to their level? Never.

Biden says he's the president of EVERYBODY, and he acts like it. He's country over party as president.

Unlike Trump, who's only unconditionally president for himself and conditionally for everybody else, even the Republican Party. The condition? Loyalty. Rule of Men. He's Trump over party over country.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
98. Thanks. You nailed it. And for weeks, since there's so little ground above sea level,
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 08:45 PM
Sep 2022

there is no drainage. The muck, dirt will linger and a huge pestilence will hit areas with unevaporated, standing water. Then the mold malingers afterward.

Recovery from water damage takes forever, and often, people just tear stuff down and rebuild.

UGADawg

(501 posts)
91. Go to Alabama. Georgia is full of half-backs who...
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 06:12 PM
Sep 2022

moved to Florida from the North. Now for many reasons they are fleeing to Georgia and North Carolina. (They moved half back to the North.)

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
99. Haha good one!
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 08:47 PM
Sep 2022

Because it's so true.

That said, I've also seen a lot of Georgia plates here. I think they don't want the heavy rains and wind, either.

 

BaeBnakes99

(36 posts)
95. Stay safe is key
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 07:27 PM
Sep 2022

Good thinking to evacuate. There is an individual on youtube.. the channel Tropical Tidbits, whom I like a lot and think his technical updates on hurricanes are really great. No fuss just the facts as they unfold; every half day or so. Levi Cohen on twitter.

SergeStorms

(19,108 posts)
96. You stay safe, 'ya hear!
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 07:36 PM
Sep 2022

My Mom used to live in Ft. Myers before she had enough and moved inland. She had her "hurricane kit" ready at all times.

Get the heck out of town. Lets hope its not another year than brings storm after storm like 2004. Get on some high ground and hunker down. You can replace things, but you are irreplaceable, my dear ancianita.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
101. Will do, Serge!
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 08:54 PM
Sep 2022

I'm in slammin' Alabama. High and dry in Dothan. Hangin' out and checking the locals.

Awww, you warm my heart, Serge.

SergeStorms

(19,108 posts)
104. I've driven through Dothan...
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 09:29 PM
Sep 2022

but never stayed there. You'll be safe there. It'll be rainy, so don't get wet. Being made from sugar you'd melt, and we wouldn't want that!

OK, I've spread the fertilizer thick enough around here. 😉 Stay safe my friend.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
105. Thank you, appalachiablue. I've got nothing but time to check in, now that I've escaped, to
Mon Sep 26, 2022, 09:46 PM
Sep 2022

rail on about the environmental endangerment that floods of climate change are for us humans. And how authoritarians like DeSantis twist disaster and pandemics into dramas and blame games and outright defamation of those who want power to the people.

Journalism never goes after this anti-democratic playbook because it's owned, too. Only live action real civic journalists can force honesty into journalism that loves to report the slow roll wreckage but never who/what caused it.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
107. Wow, thanks! It looks like a collective stupidity born of desperation. But I-4 just heads east
Tue Sep 27, 2022, 10:15 AM
Sep 2022

and they'll just progress below speed limits and get caught up in constant downpours. Orlando might not be flooded but by the time they get there they'll have slogged through interstate rivers of water, anyway.

If you've got a car and didn't head out of state, there's only higher ground to get to but really no escape from Ian.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
114. Thanks. Luck is holding. I get to stay at this hotel in Dothan as long as I need to.
Tue Sep 27, 2022, 07:19 PM
Sep 2022

I'm not returning until friends let me know that electricity's on and the FDOT reports normal traffic.

The worst effects are the flooding after the hurricane's gone. For weeks, since there's so little ground above sea level,
there is no drainage and slow evaporation. The muck, dirt will linger, and a huge pestilence of mosquitoes will hit most people in areas with unevaporated, standing water. Then the mold malingers afterward.

Recovery from water damage takes forever, and often, people just tear stuff down and rebuild. There's only the hope that dry season begins soon and discourages mold buildup in non-brick structures.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
115. UPDATE: Florida Power and Light reports that it has outages with 58 towns reporting.
Wed Sep 28, 2022, 06:38 PM
Sep 2022

At least that's what I think the chart and comments indicate.

https://downdetector.com/status/fpl/bradenton/


MY town's electricity is still on! YAY!



ancianita

(35,895 posts)
119. UPDATE: Good news.
Wed Sep 28, 2022, 09:21 PM
Sep 2022

ABC Action Weather just showed this 5 pm map.

https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/6ca9491/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1280x720+0+0/resize/1280x720!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fewscripps-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fe1%2Fd7%2F7613acb14edca9edc39ef2a870fc%2Ftrack-storm1.jpg


My neighbor down the street from me said:

"The 5 p.m. track is in. The storm will continue NE with the strongest winds in Sarasota, Manatee, DeSoto, Hardee and Polk counties with a gradual weakening trend to a Cat 1 by 2 a.m.
WOOHOO!!!!!

Please take note of the wind speeds and also take note of the cone!
We are exactly on the left, outer edge of the cone, if not entirely out of the cone. Also take note the path has changed to our favor.

I will say this, with relative certainty, this evening we will experience a moderation of wind and reach a plateau, then it will begin to subside.

From that point, it's merely a matter of when we decide to crack open the champagne!"

So, with the electricity still on, and if the Florida Dept of Transportation says roads are passable, I think I can head back sooner than expected. Feeling relief. And optimistic.

ancianita

(35,895 posts)
121. Thank you! DU really helped me get through this. I love this place! Ever my home when I'm away from
Wed Sep 28, 2022, 11:16 PM
Sep 2022

home.

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