NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,033
Just a positive note here: Even if Charley fails to slow at landfall, it *is* possible to come through it OK.
I grew up on the Gulf Coast, and lived 4 miles from the beach. In those days, before the interstate hwys were finished, it wasn't often possible to evacuate in the face of a hurricane. I sat in a bathtub with a mattress over my head and listened as Hurricane Camille, a cat 5 with winds of 200 mph, roared right over my house. It was scary, all right, but no one in my neighborhood was hurt, and none of the homes in my neighborhood, which were built in the early 60's, were destroyed. Damaged a bit, yes, but not destroyed.
Remember that most of Orlando is new. Buildings built since 1992 have been constructed under the strictest wind code in the US, and most of the older public structures have been retrofitted to withstand pretty strong winds. Storm shutters are a huge improvement over plywood. Much of the city should come through in pretty good shape, even if the worst happens.
I grew up on the Gulf Coast, and lived 4 miles from the beach. In those days, before the interstate hwys were finished, it wasn't often possible to evacuate in the face of a hurricane. I sat in a bathtub with a mattress over my head and listened as Hurricane Camille, a cat 5 with winds of 200 mph, roared right over my house. It was scary, all right, but no one in my neighborhood was hurt, and none of the homes in my neighborhood, which were built in the early 60's, were destroyed. Damaged a bit, yes, but not destroyed.
Remember that most of Orlando is new. Buildings built since 1992 have been constructed under the strictest wind code in the US, and most of the older public structures have been retrofitted to withstand pretty strong winds. Storm shutters are a huge improvement over plywood. Much of the city should come through in pretty good shape, even if the worst happens.