Notice:
The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ.
The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.
Looks like we are gonna hafta tie some boats down to the trees.... This storm came up fast I just heard about it last night and it makes landfall tomorrow.
Hows it going there Dave5041.... I imagine you are on the road...
Ray in Atlanta, Ga. "Lee Key" '84 Catalina 25 Standard Rig / Fin Keel
The Florida panhandle coast will be brutalized by the Category 3-4 storm with horrendous winds capable of tearing roofs off houses and blowing out buildings from the inside out. Further the 8-12 foot storm surge will affect coastal residents up to 5 miles inland. South Georgia (Valdosta) will get heavy rain, winds and tornadoes on Wednesday night. Greater Atlanta may be spared but the Carolinas will get more rain. The saving grace is that this storm is moving very quickly, so the duration of the buffeting will be briefer. While we won’t see a Cat 3-4 here in the northeast, it’ll be a close call as the remnants are going to mix with a cold front here on Thursday evening and we expect to get a double blast of severe weather that’s amplified by the tropical energy of the storm.
Yep.. Dave... Im worried about pearl... Oh yes and you and yours of course... The last time we had a bad one in PC my sister was in our trailer home saying she wasn't too scared till she looked outside and saw a boat fly by.... that must have been around about 1976ish...
The famous storm that removed our original Golden Arches at McDonalds.
Anyhoo Port St Joe is gonna git smacked... Haven't had a chance to look but heard it was getting stronger last night... really not good.
Ray in Atlanta, Ga. "Lee Key" '84 Catalina 25 Standard Rig / Fin Keel
Looks like its gonna blow a hole in Shell Island ... so its gonna be 2 shell islands again. Can't wait to see the drone videos... and some of the wrecks may change.. and give up some portholes or other goodies
Ray in Atlanta, Ga. "Lee Key" '84 Catalina 25 Standard Rig / Fin Keel
Port St. Joe will have some protection from the peninsula and bay, but where I stay is on the inland side of 98 but open to the gulf. I might be wintering in Ohio this year. I used to stay near Indian Pass. IP will likely be wiped out. apalach looked bad enough in the news coverage. Again, we don't go down until January so Pearl is safely on her trailer in Ohio.
Dave B. aboard Pearl 1982 TR/SK/Trad. #3399 Lake Erie/Florida Panhandle
Just saw video of Tyndall AFB being (it would appear) totally destroyed. All were evacuated, so no casualties--at least not there.
Dave Bristle Association "Port Captain" for Mystic/Stonington CT PO of 1985 C-25 SR/FK #5032 Passage, USCG "sixpack" (expired), Now on Eastern 27 $+!nkp*+ Sarge
Yep Tyndall... Id say that was a real stroke of luck where Michael made landfall. Few stretches are that sparsely populated, and the military would get everyone out.. and the area around tyndall has trees and scrub brush to soften the effects. Not that Mexico beach and others didn't get hit. I know a row or two of somewhat decommissioned F4's that Ill bet just got turned into parts.. and I fear for Indian Pass Oyster Bar, but I expect that building has seen it before.
Anyhoo.. I really just wanted to hear Pearl was elsewhere but didn't want to ask directly..
I am GLAD to hear that!!!
Apparently one of the big boat racks at Grand Lagoon ( PCB, Treasure Island Marina I think ) got blown apart so there are gonna be some boats for sale.... We always laughed when we first saw that tin shed construction but I guess those boats are insured. I hope the business is...
Ray in Atlanta, Ga. "Lee Key" '84 Catalina 25 Standard Rig / Fin Keel
Yep Tyndall... Id say that was a real stroke of luck where Michael made landfall. Few stretches are that sparsely populated, and the military would get everyone out.. and the area around tyndall has trees and scrub brush to soften the effects.
Except that this wasn't a tornado--it had a huge swath with EF-3 tornado winds, and Tyndall is almost a part of Panama City. (I spent about the first year of my life there when my dad was in the Army Air Corps at "Tyndall Field"--so of course, I know! I had my first beers on the beach, emptying people's bottles...) Let's see how Panama City did, and not forget that people in Mexico Beach and up into Georgia, where the media hasn't focused, have had their lives changes (if they survived). This was a historic event, where hurricane forces extended far inland.
Dave Bristle Association "Port Captain" for Mystic/Stonington CT PO of 1985 C-25 SR/FK #5032 Passage, USCG "sixpack" (expired), Now on Eastern 27 $+!nkp*+ Sarge
The last storm I remember that exhibited similar destructive power was Hurricane Andrew (Cat 5) that hit Homestead FL south of Miami in the early 1990s. I was there six months after the hurricane and most of the concrete houses had no roofs, no windows or doors and many wooden frame buildings were just flattened. The destruction was more concentrated there versus Michael that was a Cat 4, but in Michael’s case was a much larger storm. The Saffir-Simpson scale is not a good indicator of the destructive power of a hurricane since it only measures peak sustained wind speed, missing out on the size and speed that reflect the scope of damage the storm can produce.
Notice: The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ. The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.