The only thing I can warn you about is that every night on the local news they have been showing various parks that are flooded out, with pumps running 24/7 to bring the water levels down. Some people have been out of their mobile homes all summer! We have had a lot of rain this summer, and lakes are overfull, and with everyone watching for tropical storms, I'd just be sure that you're not buying into anything with ANY flood potential! If there's a lake next door, maybe skip that park - and be sure to ask if there has been any flooding problems in the past...
This is the kind of reporting I'm talking about:
OSCEOLA COUNTY, Fla. -- Just as Osceola County was beginning to dry out, 3 to 5 inches of rain are expected in the coming days, WESH NewsChannel 2 reports.
Residents of one mobile home park believe that clogged drains are aggravating the problem.
"We got in a boat. We rescued a couple of animals and it's kind of funny to drive down your street. Well actually, row down your street," Julian Henry said. "I think about 1 to 2 inches would just about start to devastate this place again. I mean, that is how much water is left. In my opinion, what they should do is get the county to get out here to clean the canals out so we can get some decent drainage."
But a representative of the South Florida Water Management District said it's not the county's responsibility. Flooding on the property is the responsibility of the mobile home park's management. Concerned residents are pleading for help.
"Give us some kind of an answer, some kind of help. The water was almost waist deep for me to cross and get to the neighbors," JoAnn Hoag said.
What the county is doing is setting up sites for residents to pick up sandbags. Osceola County is also extending an emergency declaration announced a week ago. If the problem were to get worse, the county can try to get state and federal funds to help clean the area and assist homeowners.