Hurricane Andrew

C.Ann

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Did anyone here actually experience Hurricane Andrew back in the 90's?

I taped Dateline this past Sunday and they had a segment on it called, "The Perfect Storm- Hurricane Andrew".. There were actual videos that people were filming from inside their homes as the hurricane was taking place and they sounded SO absolutely TERRIFIED!!

After watching that, I'm not sure I could ride out a severe hurricane such as Andrew and ever feel safe in Florida (or any other hurricane prone area) again..

If there is anyone here that actually experienced that storm, how did you recover from it?
 
I was visiting some friends of the family in Ocala. They own an exotic animal farm and couldn't leave the animals.......we really believed that we could hunker down and ride it out.

EVERYTHING was destroyed.....hundreds of animals died, the house we were in was ripped apart....I'm surprised I am here to talk about it.
 
After watching those videos and listening to people who were interviewed later, it was such a traumatic event I would almost bet that a lot of them ended up with long term post-traumatic stress syndrome.. How could they not?
:earseek:
 
I watched the same episode. It was so sad about the little girl that stayed to help with the animals at the zoo.
 

I watched the Dateline episode and it brought back a lot of memories of when I went through Hurricane Hugo. I will NOT go through another major hurricane like that again.
 
floridaminnie said:
I watched the Dateline episode and it brought back a lot of memories of when I went through Hurricane Hugo. I will NOT go through another major hurricane like that again.

My mother's thoughts on Hugo were the same. She evacuates for all storms now if she's in the zone. I was in high school at the time and assumed all hurricanes happened at night b/c that is when it struck us. The irony--she's moving to that area--househunting trip is next weekend.


I am morbidly fascinated with Hurricanes---but run for the hills when they come and cringe when I come home. If a reporter--I'd be the idiot on the beach telling people NOT to be in the storm.

C. Ann--I would assume that those people who suffered immensely probably had some PSD---and hopefully those who couldn't deal with it could get counseling.
 
I lived in Miami at the time of Hurricane Andrew. We lived a bit further north of the eye in Coral Gables so we didn't have much damage. We have friends who live(d) in Cutler Ridge and Homestead who were devastated and took a long time to recover property-wise and mentally.

The aftermath was rough too--no electricity, curfew, no gas, no food in the groceries, looting. I can't even imagine what the people who lived in badly damaged houses for months and months afterward went through.

We live in New Orleans now and we've been really lucky lately (knock on wood), but I did learn lesson from Andrew and I stock up on supplies for during and after a storm and even evacuated for Hurricane Ivan last year.
 
Also went through Hugo! 'nuff said!

When I saw what was happening in Florida with Andrew I remember breaking out into sobs for hours!
 
Andrew was a horrible storm. One of it's saving graces was the fact that it went across Florida so quickly. That being said, my DH worked for Publix then and he and some friends of ours were told to go down to Homestead (pretty much where the eye hit) to help with the cleaning up of some stores. We were on the Dade/Broward line. Before they left they were told to make sure you count the exits so you know where to get off.

They thought, "Nah, we've lived here all our lives...we know where we're going."

Good thing one of the guys was counting them. DH said it was like a war zone. Worst that he's ever seen. Quite honestly, if Andrew hadn't bobbled before it struck, I think it would've been ALOT worse in all respects. And I'm not minimizing how bad it was.

I would never want to live through a storm that bad again. If we still lived down there, I'd probably pack up and go at a strong Cat 2 and up.

Pam
 
Thanks for all of the responses here.. Fascinating to read of your personal experiences..

I have a fascination with weather extremes too - but I would NOT be standing on the beach reporting the news - LOL..

If I were down there and a hurricane was on the horizon, I actually can't say for sure what I would do.. I'm sure I would think about Hurricane Andrew and that in turn would probably do me in right there.. You folks are a LOT braver than I would be..

The scenes after the hurricane were heartbreaking.. People fighting over food and water; the looting; people having to arm themselves to protect what little they had left.. It honestly looked like something you would only see in the movies..:(

Let's all hope the remainder of the hurricane season will be a mild one for ALL hurricane prone areas!! :earseek:
 
C.Ann said:
I have a fascination with weather extremes too - but I would NOT be standing on the beach reporting the news - LOL..

:sunny:

I'm NOT doing that of course--but had I been in the news industry sans children still....I'd be volunteering.

Wouldn't chase a tornado though.

And I self-admit that all the reporters are idiots who do this.
 
I was on a cruise ship going to Bermuda (Celebrity lines) during Hurricane Andrew. We left from NYC and that first night out was really rocking and rolling. Everyone was sick. I can remember being in the stateroom not being sick to my stomach but not being able to get out of bed either.

My Dh was fine and our boys were 2 years 9 months then and just 5. They too were fine. Even today they talk about that vacation and how Mommy just kept calling Room service to bring the food because they were hungry and you really couldn't walk the decks it was rocking and rolling so much. After the first night, it was pretty smooth sailing but it took us 5 years to do another cruise and then we did it in June so we wouldn't have to deal with a hurricane.

Last year we were in Hurricane Francis on the Disney Magic and got held over on the ship 3 extra days. I will say that being in Andrew was far more rocking and rolling then last year on the Magic.

This year, we've opted to stay home this week. Just not going to temp fate :lol
 
We lived in Boca Raton at the time. I went to bed around midnight, but DH stayed up the entire night. The next day we had plenty of branches down in the development, but nothing major.

That was in 1992, and I was about 2 weeks pregnant. Did my home pregnancy test (2 of them) as the thing was approaching. Figured...if I'm going to die in a hurricane, I want to know if I'm pregnant! Both tests were positive. :teeth:

After I moved from that home and bought something else in town, I was chatting with my neighbor about Andrew. She said that she lived in Miami at that time. That was her deciding factor to move a bit north. She had the cutest dog. She said she found him wandering around after the hurricane. No one near her seemed to own him. :( But it turned out good for both of them! :)
 
I live in Southeast Louisiana and I remember it very well. It actually went out in the gulf after devastating Florida, gained strength and then slammed dierctly into Louisiana. We were without power for about a week and we were actually some of the first people to get power back.
 
The destruction was amazing and it was like nothing I've ever seen before. I remember a large spread of trees that were all just snapped over like toothpicks. Houses with their insurance numbers just spray painted on the side. Looters will be shot signs spray painted on houses. A man sitting outside of his house with a big gun! It's like when the status quo is thrown out, people turn into maniacs! I totally understood that he was protecting his property but he shouldn't have to! Makes you wonder if we weren't all kept in line what people would act like.
 
Our house went through Andrew but we didn't. I refused to leave WDW and go home to ride out a hurricane. Best decision I ever made! We came home to a house full of wet carpets, a roof with no shingles and quite a few broken windows. Electricity was out for 2 weeks, phones out for 2 months and cable tv was out for a full year.My younger daughter's school was flattened and they spent the year sharing a facility with another school north of us. I spent much of the year subbing at Homestead High School and we opened early everyday so kids could come in and shower, do homework and get a hot meal. Even though we didn't go through it my daughters were shell shocked from whatt hey came back too and both went back to using their blankies and sleeping in the same room for about 6 months.
 
I went through Betsy in New Orleans in '65. Here's an article about it that I posted in the other thread about Katrina.

Answers: Hurricane Betsy hit Florida, smashed New Orleans in 1965
By Jack Williams, USATODAY.com
Q: In late August or the first part of September 1965 a hurricane came ashore and did considerable damage to New Orleans. Please tell me the name of this hurricane and other details you may have on it. Thank you.
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1965-betsy-no-flood-noaa.jpg
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Flooding left by Hurricane Betsy in New Orleans in 1965.
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NOAA
A: The hurricane you are thinking of was Betsy, which not only hit New Orleans with winds of at least 125 mph, but also flooded large parts of the city.

All of this happened after Betsy did considerable damage in the Bahamas and southern Florida, including the Keys.

When all of the damage in the USA was totaled, it came to more than $1 billion in 1965 dollars, making Betsy the USA's first billion dollar hurricane. If you factor in inflation and put Betsy's cost into Year 2000 dollars, it cost $8.4 billion, which ties it for third in the list of the nation's most expensive hurricanes. Betsy is tied with Agnes, which caused major flooding in the Northeast in 1972, and behind only Hugo in 1989 and Andrew in 1992 in cost.

Betsy was blamed for 75 deaths in the USA, which ranks it 18th among the deadliest U.S. storms from 1900 through at least September 2003. The only storm to kill more people in the USA since 1965 was Camille, with 256 deaths in 1969.

Camille, by the way, came close to hitting New Orleans, but instead, the city felt the fringes of Camille's weather side when its eye came ashore about 60 miles to the east in Mississippi.

In addition to the people it killed and the damage it did, Betsy is famous for doing a loop the loop when it was about 350 miles east of Daytona Beach, Fla. and seemed to be on its way to hit the Carolinas.

Instead, it turned back to toward the southwest, passing over the Bahamas where winds on Great Abaco Island reached 147 mph. Soon after the eye moved over Nassau, the biggest city in the Bahamas, Betsy stalled for about three hours, allowing its winds to pound the city.

On Sept. 7 Betsy continued moving toward the southwest to pass over Key Largo at the eastern end of the Florida Keys, and then continued west along the Keys.

As Betsy continued across the Gulf of Mexico and turned toward the northwest, it grew into a category 4 storm with winds up to 155 mph.

As the hurricane moved ashore south of New Orleans it destroyed almost every building in Grand Isle, where the Coast Guard station reported gusts up to 160 mph.

Winds up to 125 mph were measured in New Orleans.

Betsy drove storm surge into Lake Pontchartrain, which is just north of the city and is connected to the Gulf of Mexico, pushing water over levees around the lake. Flood water reaches the eves of houses in some places in the city.

A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Web site notes that "Betsy prompted Congress to authorize a ring of levees 16 feet high around the city — a project the Corps of Engineers is completing today. This level of protection was based on the science of storm prediction as it existed in the 1960s. The question remains, however, whether this level of protection would be sufficient to protect the city from a category 4 or 5 hurricane today — or even a category 3 storm that lingered over the city."
 
I was living in South (Miami) Beach at the time. We were ordered to evacuate, so we went to a friend's house in Miami. The storm hit land right in that part of town, lol. When we returned home everything was intact.

Andrew was pretty scary, but I don't think I was *that* traumatized by it. I remember that when hurricane season started the next year I had a sense of dread whenever the wind blew hard; however, we stayed home for Katrina, and mostly slept trhough it.
 
I lived in Davie, which is just south of Ft Lauderdale, during Andrew. Thankfully for us, our area suffered very little. However, it was still very scary. I was 15, and my 18 year old sister and I spent the night sitting in the hallway. We started the night in the bathroom, but the window in there kept creeking and it was scaring me a bit. The sound of the wind was terrifying.

The scariest moment was before the storm, though. We went to church that morning, and before we went in the radio was saying it was a category 2. When we came out, about 2 hours later, it was a 4. That really freaked me out.
 
I lived in the hurricane zone (South Dade) during Andrew. Ignorance was bliss, as going into it we didn't know what to expect. Walking around outside the morning after, was horrifying. Like Katrina, Andrew was supposed to hit north of us and both of them came right through our area. It was a lot more structural damage from Andrew, but alot of trees down due to Katrina. We are still waiting for electricity (using computer at my sister's house), but it will be less than the two weeks after Andrew

The one thing I have learned, don't look at the little black line, look at the whole cone...These storms can always turn. :rolleyes:
 












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