Anyone from South Fl. around when Hurricane Andrew hit??

Poohbear123

<font color=CCCC00>Will travel without lipstick<br
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On August 24 will be 10 years!:eek: Where has the time gone? Since then, my DH and I have lost our Parents, his DD had a Baby and has Moved to Alabama, and He has retired from Dade County Schools. 3 months after Andrew, he was working 7 days a week to get the schools ready down where Andrew hit. He was working with Structural Engineers from NY. 2 weeks after Andrew, I went down there, to take Pictures of the devestation. Not much had changed in those 2 weeks.:confused:
 
I wasn't there but my dad was. He lived in Homestead in a mobil home. He always comes home in the summer and usually stays untill after labor day. Well that year he went back early he was home 3 days when Andrew hit. When they were having everyone leave he called and said he was with some friends who also lived in homestead and were all going to head up to Tampa to my uncles house. So when i saw the next morning that homestead took a direct hit I was very upset but glad that he decided to leave. Well guess what, he was there the roads were so crowded they all decided to stay at the house of the friends daughter well just thank god that they were all ok.. When he was able to get back into his park there was nothing left of his trailer except his bed was there and he said it looked like it had not been touched infact he had forgotten his video camera and it was still on the bed also his closet was there with all of his clothes, but they never did find his washer and dryer. We were there 7 months later and things were still a mess. He now lives in Sebring.
 
Hard to believe that it has been 10 years since Andrew. Remember like it was yesterday, seeing all the devastation on the news each night. We haven't had a hurricane in North Florida for over 38 years.

Theresa
 
Poohbear - I was in college and working at Publix at the time. That whole weekend was a nightmare. I worked 13 hours that Sunday. 7am to 8pm. It started to rain around then but I lived only a few blocks away from the store. I was so tired, I fell asleep and slept thorugh the whole storm. I didn't hear a thing. I woke up the next morning and it was all quiet like nothing happened. Our neighborhood wasn't hit bad. A few trees had been uprooted but we still had power.
 

I was born and raised in Homestead, I happened to be away at FSU when the hurricane destroyed my house and my grandparents, along with everything we owned. I remember driving home right after the hurricane hit and I honestly couldn't find my house everything looked sooo different. It is amazing though how that little community has come back, my mother and grandmother still live there, and the memories of hurricane andrew will be with us forever. :(
 
Wow, I didn't know you worked for Publix too.:p Small world. I was at the Warehouse at the time, on 183rd st. and I had Fri. Sat. and Sunday off, but was suppose to start back on Monday. Needless to say, I didn't but was called into work on Wednesday.:rolleyes: We were without lights for 5 days. I remember my DH and I waiting for his Mom and Dad to come up from Key Largo. Him and I were" batting down the Hatches" so to speak, and the day was Sunny, but the wind was strange.:confused: It started blowing gusts around 12:00 noon Sunday Afternoon. At first, they thought Ft. Lauderdale was going to take the Direct hit, but at the last second, it dipped down to hit Homestead. My Mom, and my DH's Mom and Dad all stayed in our house and at 3:08am it HIT! Needless o say, we were UP after that.:rolleyes: Lights instantly went out, and we got the Flash Lights and Kerosene Lamps out. My Kids slept thru it, but I woke them up, in case something happened and we all huddled in the living room.
 
I too used to live in Homestead (we were an air force family). We had recently moved to the Melbourne FL area before Andrew. I remember when the Hurricane hit. It seemed like the worst thing in the world. The home we had lived in was completely demolished so were the homes of all of our neighbors. Two years after Andrew is the last time I have been back to Homestead and it was still pretty horrible. Buildings that had been destroyed were left to stand in their own wreckage, entire housing communities looked like waste land. Any one who thinks Hurricanes are am excuse for a party, or a good day surfing should have their head examined.
 
Tell me about it!:rolleyes: Nobody was partying at my house. About 3 years ago, we had another Hurricane Scare, and they found some People On the Beach, swimming. When they got OUT of the water, they were Arrested for Not following Police Orders to leave the Area.:D
 
I ran across this NOAA press release tonight, about Andrew.

AFTER 10 YEARS, HURRICANE ANDREW GAINS STRENGTH
In the record books, it's still one of America's costliest hurricanes, and today National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists announced Hurricane Andrew was even stronger than originally believed when it made landfall in south Florida 10 years ago this week. Based on new research, scientists upgraded the storm from a Category 4, to a Category 5, the highest on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale.

In their re-analysis of Hurricane Andrew's maximum sustained surface-wind speeds, the NOAA/National Hurricane Center Best Track Committee, a team of hurricane experts, concluded winds were 165 mph - 20 mph faster than earlier estimated B as the storm made landfall. Herbert Saffir, a structural engineer who co-designed the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, joined the committee as an observer and reviewed the team's results.

The upgrade makes Andrew only the third Category 5 (wind speeds greater than 155 mph) hurricane on record to strike the continental United States. The other two Category 5 storms were the "Florida Keys 1935 Hurricane", and Hurricane Camille in 1969.

"There is always some uncertainty in determining the maximum winds in a hurricane, and Andrew is no exception," said Max Mayfield, director of the National Hurricane Center, a part of NOAA's National Weather Service. "Our previous estimate was 145 mph, based on the science available in 1992. With advanced research techniques and technology, we now estimate the winds were stronger."

Andrew was directly responsible for 23 fatalities in Florida and Louisiana, and about $25 billion in damages (1992 dollars), according to NOAA.

The National Hurricane Center has had an ongoing program to review the historical record of all storms. Scientists and other researchers note that society needs an accurate account of the frequency and intensity of past catastrophic events to best plan for the future.

"We have recently completed a review of a re-analysis of storms from 1851 to 1910," said Colin McAdie, chairman of the National Hurricane Center's Best Track Committee. This re-analysis effort was undertaken by a team led by Dr. Chris Landsea of NOAA's Hurricane Research Division (HRD) and supported by a grant from the NOAA Office of Global Programs (OGP).

Hurricane Andrew is one of the most significant cases studied. According to McAdie, scientific understanding of the wind structure in strong hurricanes has significantly increased since 1992. For Andrew, the Best Track Committee considered input from scientists at the HRD, including the "re-analysis team" and National Hurricane Center.

Since 1997, forecasters have used Global Positioning System dropwindsondes, a measuring device dropped from hurricane reconnaissance aircraft into the eyewall - the windiest part of the hurricane. The sonde system measures temperature, barometric pressure, water vapor and wind data every 15 feet on its way down.

This new method gave meteorologists an important glimpse into the true strength of these devastating storms. The analyses of the dropwindsonde data indicated that, on average, the maximum sustained surface-wind speed was about 90 percent of the wind speed measured at the 10,000-foot aircraft level flown as Andrew approached south Florida. In 1992, Andrew's wind speed was estimated at 75 to 80 percent of the aircraft observations. The research findings resulted in an increase in the estimated wind speeds of Hurricane Andrew from 145 mph to 165 mph.

Best Track Committee Findings:
Hurricane Andrew was a Category 5 over open water on approach to South Florida.


Hurricane Andrew was a Category 5 on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale at time of landfall, with Category 5 winds occurring in a small area on the immediate coast having open exposure to Biscayne Bay.


Winds at specific locations over land in Miami-Dade County are unknown due to remaining scientific uncertainties.


There should be continuing research aimed at better determining hurricane winds immediately preceding, and during landfall. The "Hurricane Landfall" component of the U.S. Weather Research Program is structured to address such a question.
When Hurricane Andrew hit southeast Miami-Dade County, Fla., August 24, 1992, flying debris in the storm's winds knocked out most ground-based wind measuring instruments, and widespread power outages caused electric-based measuring equipment to fail. The winds were so strong many wind-measuring tools were incapable of registering the maximum winds. Surviving wind observations and measurements from aircraft reconnaissance, surface pressure, satellite analysis, radar, and distribution of debris and structural failures were used to estimate the surface winds.

NOAA's National Weather Service is the primary source of weather data, forecasts and warnings for the United States and its territories. NOAA's National Weather Service operates the most advanced weather and flood warning and forecast system in the world, helping to protect lives and property and enhance the national economy. To learn more about NOAA's National Weather Service, please visit http://www.nws.noaa.gov.
 
Thanks for the info!;) I hate to tell you this, but I believe more People were Killed in this storm than the figures they have out. My DH said that people around the area, where the storm hit bad, said they had body bags stored in one of the nearby schools. The Person who saw this, counted at least 60 bags, and NO they were NOT empty.:confused:
 
It's impossible to forget that hurricane. We lived about an hour north of Miami at the time. Even up where we were the winds really kicked up and I had trouble falling asleep. DH stayed up all night long watching reports on the TV. It was right when we were first trying to have a baby and I thought...if I'm going to die in a hurricane I want to know if I'm pregnant. I went and got a pregnancy test and did it before the hurricane hit land. I was thrilled I was pregnant! :teeth: Our neighborhood was okay for the most part. Lots of limbs down off trees, but that wasn't bad compared to other areas. As a matter of fact, the lady across the street from me now says her dog was a stray in the Homestead/Miami area after the hurricane and she brought him up here with her. :teeth:
 
My parents, and all of my siblings were in Ft. Lauderdale. I remember being on the phone with them when they thought it was coming there. They had begun the preparations for evacuation. The police were already starting to come through, nothing had gone mandatory at that point. Then it turned and devastated Homestead.

I spent many years at Homestead AFB as a member of the Civil Air Patrol. It was sad to see it not used after Andrew.

Anyone notice these Catagory 5 Hurricanes are happening every 30 years or so? 30's 60's and 90's...only 3
 



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