Florida Hurricane Preperation Advice

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May 8, 2002
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Subject: FLORIDA HURRICANE PREPARATION

You all should be aware of hurricane preparations, but in case you need a refresher course: We're about to enter the peak of the hurricane season. Any minute now, you're going to turn on the TV and see a weather person pointing to some radar blob out in the Atlantic Ocean and making two basic meteorological points.

(1) There is no need to panic.

(2) We could all be killed.

Yes, hurricane season is an exciting time to be in Florida. If you're new to the area, you're probably wondering what you need to do to prepare for the possibility that we'll get hit by "the big one."

Based on our insurance industry experiences, we recommend that you follow this simple three-step hurricane preparedness plan:

STEP 1: Buy enough food and bottled water to last your family for at least three days.

STEP 2: Put these supplies into your car.

STEP 3: Drive to Nebraska and remain there until Halloween.

Unfortunately, statistics show that most people will not follow this sensible plan. Most people will foolishly stay here in Florida.

We'll start with one of the most important hurricane preparedness items:

HOMEOWNERS'INSURANCE: If you own a home, you must have hurricane insurance. Fortunately, this insurance is cheap and easy to get, as long as your home meets two basic requirements:

(1) It is reasonably well-built, and

(2) It is located in Wisconsin

Unfortunately, if your home is located in Florida, or any other area that might actually be hit by a hurricane, most insurance companies would prefer not to sell you hurricane insurance, because then they might be required to pay YOU money, and that is certainly not why they got into the insurance business in the first place. So you'll have to scrounge around for an insurance company, which will charge you an annual premium roughly equal to the replacement value of your house. At any moment, this company can drop you like used dental floss.

SHUTTERS:

Your house should have hurricane shutters on all the windows and all the doors. There are several types of shutters, with advantages and disadvantages:

Plywood shutters: The advantage is that, because you make them yourself, they're cheap.

Sheet-metal shutters: The advantage is that these work well, once you get them all up. The disadvantage is that once you get them all up, your hands will be useless bleeding stumps, and it will be December.

Roll-down shutters: The advantages are that they're very easy to use, and will definitely protect your house. The disadvantage is that you will have to sell your house to pay for them.

Hurricane-proof windows: These are the newest wrinkle in hurricane protection: They look like ordinary windows, but they can withstand hurricane winds! You can be sure of this, because the salesman says so. He lives in Nebraska.

Hurricane Proofing your property: As the hurricane approaches, check

your yard for movable objects like barbecue grills, planters, patio furniture, visiting relatives, etc... you should, as a precaution, throw these items into your swimming pool (if you don't have a swimming pool, you should have one built immediately). Otherwise, the hurricane winds will turn these objects into deadly missiles.

EVACUATION ROUTE:

If you live in a low-lying area, you should have an evacuation route planned out. (To determine whether you live in a low-lying area, look at your driver's license; if it says "Florida," you live in a low-lying (area.) The purpose of having an evacuation route is to avoid being trapped in your home when a major storm hits. Instead, you will be trapped in a gigantic traffic jam several miles from your home, along with two hundred thousand other evacuees. So, as a bonus, you will not die lonely.

HURRICANE SUPPLIES:

If you don't evacuate, you will need a mess of supplies. Do not buy them now! Florida tradition requires that you wait until the last possible minute, then go to the supermarket and get into vicious fights with strangers over who gets the last can of cat food.

In addition to food and water, you will need the following supplies:

23 flashlights. At least $167 worth of batteries that turn out, when the power goes off, to be the wrong size for the flashlights.

Bleach. (No, I don't know what the bleach is for. NOBODY knows what the bleach is for, but it's traditional, so GET some!)

A big knife that you can strap to your leg. (This will be useless in a hurricane, but it looks cool.)

A large quantity of raw chicken, to placate the alligators. (Ask anybody who went through Andrew; after the hurricane, there WILL be irate alligators.)

$35,000 in cash or diamonds so that, after the hurricane passes, you can buy a generator from a man with no discernible teeth.

Of course these are just basic precautions. As the hurricane draws near, it is vitally important that you keep abreast of the situation by turning on your television if you have a generator that's working to keep the TV going and watching TV reporters in rain slickers stand right next to the ocean and tell you over and over how vitally important it is for everybody to stay away from the ocean.

Good luck and remember: It's great living in Paradise
 
With the exception of the section on shutters, all of this applies to California earthquakes.
 
Tokyo has recurrent problems too.

They get regular visits from Godzilla who is around 50M tall, weighs 20,000 tons, and has a radioative flame.

1800071158p.jpg


Florida has the same thing, except:

Ours visitors are 45-60,000 feet tall and hundreds of miles wide;
weighs many millions of tons;
and, uses floods, tornatos, and lightning instead of radioactive flames;

Both visitors love to stump every building in their path into the ground; and both are feared, unwelcomed, and expensive. Tokyo's monster is horrible, destructive, and a major cinema star. Unfortunately, ours are more horrible, more destructive, and all too real.

n2s
 
Hurricane Frances? I don’t know. That sounds like a gay hurricane. Hopefully it won’t be as bad as everyone thinks. Maybe it’ll just be a pain in the ass. I can joke because I live in Canada. :)
 
I have a sister named Frances and she definitely has hurricane-like properties, but not generally destructive. Here in the Yukon we rarely get hurricanes but we do have hideous cold a large part of the year. :D
 
FLORIDA HURRICANE PREPARATION

Is this kind of like Preparation H?
 
Alberta Ed said:
I have a sister named Frances and she definitely has hurricane-like properties, but not generally destructive. Here in the Yukon we rarely get hurricanes but we do have hideous cold a large part of the year. :D
Oh no. Frances is a girl’s name. Francis is the gay name I was thinking of. I can’t spell and now I’m doomed. I don’t feel so safe in Canada after all. Women hurricanes are bad, especially when insulted! :footinmou
 
Ookpik said:
Francis is the gay name I was thinking of. I can’t spell and now I’m doomed. :footinmou
You are doomed if the late great Francis Sinatra's guys find you. :p
 
Just a couple of weeks ago, Hurricane Charley came right over my house, It damaged my roof, and my ceilings leaked water into all the rooms in my home except the masterbed room and my sons room, several window were blown out and my pool cage was carried away by the powerful winds. I loss all the oak trees in my backyard, and I loss electricy and water for 13 days. My insurance company apraised the damage at just alittle uder $35,000. Hurricanes can really suck, be prepared, and be safe.

Ron Medise
Port Charlotte, Fl
 
Ookpik said:
Oh no. Frances is a girl’s name. Francis is the gay name I was thinking of. I can’t spell and now I’m doomed. I don’t feel so safe in Canada after all. Women hurricanes are bad, especially when insulted! :footinmou

Oh, man.

My wife's grandfather was a first generation Irish cop in San Francisco from the fifties through the early eighties, and his given name is Francis. I've heard some of his stories, and I'll tell you one thing. I wouldn't tell that old man to his face that Francis is a gay name, even though he's fifty years older, seven inches shorter, and better'n a hundred pounds lighter than me. He's the kind who'd go find his old .45 and nightstick, then come back and ask if you wanted to repeat that he has a gay name. Don't think I'm joking, either.

Eustace. Now there's a gay name.

James
 
Myakka said:
My insurance company apraised the damage at just alittle uder $35,000. Hurricanes can really suck, be prepared, and be safe.
Wow, you got hammered. I hope you get a break this time around. :(
 
My GF lives on campus at the college in Gainesville...thankfully it hasnt hit their really, or not yet at least :).

Good luck and good karma to those who may be affected.
 
Robert.B said:
My GF lives on campus at the college in Gainesville...thankfully it hasnt hit their really, or not yet at least :).

Good luck and good karma to those who may be affected.

Robert,

I'm about 45 minutes north of University of Florida. I used to drive there four days a week. Local news is telling us that we won't feel the affects until Monday because the storm is moving so slowly. Based upon the "current" projected storm paths, your girlfriend is looking like she might come out as good as could be expected considering the expansive size of this storm. As it stands now, she'll hopefully only experience some of the outer bands. That means tropical storm force winds and a possibility of tornados. All in all, this news is a great relief since previous predictions were much more dire. Best of luck to your girlfriend.

My grandmother lives in W.P.B. and decided to stay through the storm. She said that a little while ago they had 55 m.p.h. winds. The storm hasn't hit them yet, it's still a ways off the coast. I'm really concerned about her and my grandfather who both stayed. I'm also very concerned about our BFC friends out of Port St. Lucie and Martin County. Hey Geraldo and Stihl how are you guys doing? Based on the pictures, it looks like it's coming in right on top of you. We're praying for you over here. Stay inside and think good thoughts. :(
 
Well hopefully it wont hit too hard, I talked with her on the phone just before and it appears classes have been cancelled and all the usual precautions...thanks for posting that though, hopefully the outer band effects received are very minimal, I fretted enough when the last one hit...

Stay safe people and keep us all informed of your well being...I know most of the people on here would be insured but I really hope no one needs to employ that safe guard.

cheers.
 
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