Florida Man
Cartoon expert and crap superhero
Now upgraded to a Category 5. Being that I, and some other caftards, live in Florida, we'll be keeping an eye on it in this thread. Fingers crossed that it doesn't cross into the Gulf of Mexico.
Were you the one that just moved to Tampa or am I thinking of another caf member?Just did a run to Walmart and got my supplies. Still unsure of whether to head North. My office is in Ashburn, Va, so getting somewhere to stay up there is no problem but I have 6 cats and a dog as well and not leaving them behind.
Edit: For anyone in Florida, water is running out fast, Walmart near me cleared out already. Don't delay.
I plan on either renting a moving truck or taking multiple trips in my SUV to bring my things up farther north into Spring Hill, which with it's distance from the ocean and 70ft above sea level height, should be safe from the storm should it hit Tampa.Damages in the billions again should it sustain itself - insane
Might want to start inventorying your valuables
Been here since 2010, aside from a year in DC.Were you the one that just moved to Tampa or am I thinking of another caf member?
That's cool, man, nice to meet another fellow Tampa resident. There is also someone on the caf who just moved to Tampa (or will move to Tampa) from the DC area. Made a thread about it and all.Been here since 2010, aside from a year in DC.
Just did a run to Walmart and got my supplies. Still unsure of whether to head North. My office is in Ashburn, Va, so getting somewhere to stay up there is no problem but I have 6 cats and a dog as well and not leaving them behind.
Edit: For anyone in Florida, water is running out fast, Walmart near me cleared out already. Don't delay.
That's cool, man, nice to meet another fellow Tampa resident. There is also someone on the caf who just moved to Tampa (or will move to Tampa) from the DC area. Made a thread about it and all.
Welcome! Am in Seminole Heights here.Me! Moved a week ago.
One particular model did. It's still a bit early to see where it will pan out but I believe majority of the models have it hitting the Keys and south Florida.Doesn't/didn't the US model predict a turn to the NW up towards the Carolinas?
Puerto Rico and Hispaniola have the benefit of having mountains. Places like the Keys and the Bahamas, on the other hand, would be fecked.Miami/SE Florida could take a hit from the NE quadrant of the storm (the worst part of hurricanes) as a Cat 4.
I couldn't imagine being on a small island with this as a cat 5. Or the Keys...
Saw something on Reddit about the first meteorologist to name Hurricanes/Cyclones. Government rejected his proposal, so he started naming them after the politicians he hated.Interesting idea from George Monbiot on twitter earlier that we should start naming hurricanes after the most notorious/influential climate change deniers and fossil fuel companies.
We'll know more on the modeling projections soon, but it's not looking good for the low-lying areas.Got family out in Miami, one is flying home tonight so she will miss but my dad is holding the fort! How badly does it look like Miami will be hit?
On Sint Maarten
Yeah hopefully that guy ended up alright.Standing in front of a window isn't very smart.
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/hu...he-us-barclays-predicts/ar-AArlZAg?li=BBnb7Kz
Barclays is predicting that Irma's insured damage could be the largest insured damage ever in the US. For reference, Hurricane Katrina had $50 billion in insured damages, and Hurricane Harvey was projected to have caused property damages of $30 billion.