What follows is the #1 requested information by those who nervously anticipate the arrival of their first Hurricane experience.
As many long-time readers will know, we do have a little bit more than average experience dealing with the aftermath of hurricanes. I ain’t no expert in the before part; you need to heed the local, very local, professionals who will guide you through any preparation, and neighborhood specific guidelines, for your immediate area.
But when it comes to the ‘after part’, well, as a long-time CERT recovery member perhaps I can guide you through the expectation and you might find some value. Consider this little word salad a buffet, absorb what might be of value pass over anything else.
A category 3+ storm can erase structures, buildings and familiar landscape. Idalia is expected to be similar in forward speed to Hurricane Charley which impacted the SW coast of Florida in 2004, but the storm itself will be bigger, wider and carry a larger eyewall. Some moderate coastal topography will likely change in the 60-mile-wide area of immediate impact/landfall.
Some infrastructure failure should be anticipated, and it will take weeks for restoration. The coastal communities are the most vulnerable; however, the inland impact of this specific storm will be much more significant as the large storm continues unimpeded until the entire eye-wall crosses onto land.
That means communities inland all the way to Georgia and South Carolina could feel hurricane force winds, possibly for several hours. That scale of sustained wind energy will snap power poles and reinforced concrete.
As the backside of the storm then reverses the energy direction, any already compromised structures may not withstand the additional pressure. In many cases the backside of the storm is worse than the front. If you are inland, prepare yourself for a long duration of extensive wind damage followed by an extended power outage.
For those who are in the path of the storm, there comes a time when all options are removed, and you enter the “Hunkering Down” phase. You’re just about there now.
Fortunately, just like Charley, this particular hurricane will move fast and that might mitigate some of the coastal storm surge (only one part of one tidal cycle). However, in totality from impact through recovery this is going to be a long-duration event.
When the sustained winds reach around 45mph most emergency services stop. This makes things a heck of a lot safer in the aftermath; and much easier and safer during the rebuild.
♦ Hurricanes can be frightening; downright scary. There’s nothing quite like going through a few to reset your outlook on just how Mother Nature can deliver a cleansing cycle to an entire geographic region.
The sounds are scary. Try to stay calm despite the nervousness. Telephone and power poles, yes, even the concrete ones, can, and likely will, snap like toothpicks. Trees will bend and break. When the roof shingles are peeling off, it sounds like horses running across your roof. The sounds are dramatic.
There’s a specific sound when you are inside a hurricane that you can never forget. It ain’t a howl, it’s a roar. It is very unique sound in depth and weight. Yes, within a hurricane wind has weight. Stay clear of windows and doors, and within an interior room of the house or apartment if possible. That scary roar sounds like it won’t ever quit…. it will… eventually; but at the time you are hunkering down, it doesn’t seem like it will ever end.
A hurricane wind is a constant and pure rage of wind that doesn’t ebb and flow like normal wind and storms. Hurricane wind is heavy, it starts, builds and stays; sometimes for hours. Relentless, it just won’t let up. The constant rage is fueled by simultaneous surges inside it. Just like the water that fuels her, Idalia will deliver a rage of wind energy that has surges within the relentless force.
And then, suddenly, depending on Idalia’s irrelevant opinion toward your insignificant presence, it will stop. Judging by the forward speed the hurricane force wind will likely last around 2 to 3 hours before it stops.
Then silence. No birds. No frogs. No crickets. No sound.
Nature goes mute. It’s weird.
We have no idea how much ambient noise is around us, until it stops.
Due to the speed of the storm, there will be convoys coming to construct a pre-planned electricity grid recovery process even before nightfall tomorrow.
Convoys from every city, town and state from the east-coast to the mid-west. A glorious melding of dirty fingernails all arriving for the meet-up.
Depending on your proximity to the bigger picture objectives at hand, you will cherish their arrival.
But first, there will be an assessment.
The convoys will stage at pre-determined locations using radios for communication. Most cell phone services will likely be knocked out. Recovery teams will begin a street-by-street review; everything needs to be evaluated prior to thinking about beginning to rebuild a grid. Your patience within this process is needed; heck, it ain’t like you’ve got a choice in the matter…. so just stay positive.
Meanwhile, you might walk outside and find yourself a stranger in your neighborhood.
It will all be cattywampus.
Trees gone, signs gone, crap everywhere, if you don’t need to travel, DON’T.
I mean CRAP e.v.e.r.y.w.h.e.r.e.
Stay away from power-lines.
Try to stay within your immediate neighborhood for the first 36-48 hours. Keep the roadways and main arteries clear for recovery workers, power companies and fuel trucks.

Be entirely prepared to be lost in your own neighborhood and town for days, weeks, and even months. Unknown to you – your subconscious mind is like a human GPS mapping system. When that raging Idalia takes away the subconscious landmarks I guarantee you – you are gonna get lost, make wrong turns, miss the exit etc.
It’s kinda funny and weird at the same time.
Your brain is wired to turn left at the big oak next to the Church, and the road to your house is likely two streets past the 7-11 or Circle-k. You don’t even notice that’s how you travel around town; that’s just your brain working – it is what it is.
Well, now the big oak is gone; so too is the Circle-K and 7-11 signs. Like I said, everything is cattywampus. Your brain-memory will need to reboot and rewire. In the interim, you’re gonna get lost… don’t get frustrated.
No street signs. Likely no stop signs. No traffic lights.
Remember, when it is safe to drive, every single intersection must be treated like a four-way stop…. and YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE TO PAY ATTENTION. Even the major intersections.
You’ll need to override your brain tendency to use memory in transit. You’ll need to pay close attention and watch for those who ain’t paying close attention. Travel sparingly, it’s just safer.
Check on your-self first, then your neighbors. It don’t matter if you’ve never said a word to the guy in the blue house before. It ain’t normalville now.
Break out of your box and check on the blue house down the street too. In the aftermath, there’s no class structure. Without power, the big fancy house on the corner with a pool is just a bigger mess. Everyone is equally a mess.
The first responders in your neighborhood are YOU.
You, the wife, your family, Mrs. Wilson next door; Joe down the street; Bob’s twin boys and the gal with the red car are all in this together. If you don’t ordinarily cotton to toxic masculinity, you will worship it in the aftermath of a hurricane. Git-r-done lives there.
Don’t stand around griping with a 40′ tree blocking the main road to your neighborhood. Figure out who’s got chainsaws, who knows how to correctly use them, and set about safely clearing the road. If every neighborhood starts clearing their own roadways, the recovery crews can then move in for the details.
Stage one focuses on major arteries… then secondary… then neighborhood etc. It’s a process. Oh, and don’t get mad if your fancy mailbox is ploughed-over by a focused front end loader who is on a priority mission to clear a path. Just deal with it. Those same front-end loaders will also be removing feet of sand from coastal roads. Don’t go sightseeing… stay in your neighborhood.
For the first 36-48 hours, please try to stay close to home, in your neighborhood. Another reason to stay close to home is the sketchy people who can sometimes surface, looters etc. Staying close to home and having contact with your neighbors is just reasonable and safer.
Phase-1 recovery is necessarily, well, scruffy…. we’re just moving and managing the mess; not trying to clean it up yet. It’ll be ok. There are going to be roofing nails everywhere, and you will likely get multiple flat tires in the weeks after the hurricane.
After this storm half of the people living near the impact zone are going to fit into two categories, two types of people: (1) those with a new roof; or (2) those with a blue roof (tarp).
Keep a joyous heart filled with thankfulness; and if you can’t muster it, then just pretend. Don’t be a jerk. You will be surrounded by jerks…. elevate yourself. If you need to do a few minutes of cussing, take a walk. Keep your wits about you and stay calm.
Now, when the recovery teams arrive…. If you are on the road and there’s a convoy of utility trucks on the road, pull over. Treat power trucks and tanker trucks like ambulances and emergency vehicles. Pull over, give them a clear road and let them pass.
When everyone gets to work, if you see a lineman, pole-digger or crew say thanks. Just simple “thanks”. Wave at them and give them a thumbs-up. No need to get unnecessarily familiar, a simple: “thank you for your help” will suffice. You know, ordinary people skills. The stuff that was common before the internet.
Many of these smaller crews will be sleeping in cots, or in their trucks while they are working never-ending shifts. Some will be staging at evacuation shelters, likely schools and such. The need to shelter people and recovery crews might also delay the re-opening of schools.
Once you eventually start getting power back, if you see a crew in a restaurant, same thing applies… “thanks guys”. If you can pay their tab, do it. If you can pay their tab without them knowing, even better.
Same goes for the tanker truckers. The convenience stores with gas pumps are part of the priority network. Those will get power before other locales without power. Fuel outlets are a priority. Fuel is the lifeblood of recovery. Hospitals, first responders, emergency facilities, fuel outlets, then comes commercial and residential.
Remember, this is important – YOU are the first responder for your neighborhood. Don’t quit. Recovery is a process. Depending on the scale of the impact zone, the process can take days, weeks and even months.
Take care of your family first; then friends and neighborhood, and generally make a conscious decision to be a part of any needed solution.
Pray together and be strong together. It might sound goofy to some, but don’t be bashful about being openly thankful in prayer.
It will be ok.
It might be a massive pain in the a**, but in the end, it’ll be ok.
√Andrew
√Jeanne
√Frances
√Ivan
√Charley
√Irma
√Michael
√Ian
Keep a good thought. Who knows, we might even end up shaking hands.
It’ll be OK. I Promise.
Love to all,
Sundance
[¹Support CTH Here]
¹Footnote – If you know any good deals on window A/C units in Florida, drop me an email (or comment). I gave away all that we had during Ian, and I would like to purchase some new ones for people who will need.


God bless and keep you and your loved ones safe, Sundance. You are an amazing human being. ❤️
Love you Sundance. Praying for Florida right now.
Ryan Hall, Y’all will be live on YouTube through the entire storm. He’s better than TV weather options in my opinion. I believe he was the first to predict this hurricane.
Live Stream – Hurricane Idalia Coverage With Storm Chasers On The Ground – Live Weather Channel… via Ryan Hall Y’all
https://commoncts.blogspot.com/2023/08/live-hurricane-idalia-coverage-with.html
Something I keep asking but never get an answer: with residential/rooftop solar, what happens? I think I read there is supposed to be voltage sensing on the grid side that opens a disconnect to prevent feeding back into the grid, but would like some confirmation. Then, how are you sure those devices work as advertised? What wind speed are those roof panels rated for? Looks like they would make killer projectiles or rip your roof off.
Florida has strict building codes. Panels should be designed for anticipated wind speeds. I expect they are engineered.
I designed and engineered a system for a home I had in BIG snow country. Panels were designed for anticipated snow, wind and earthquake. Pretty normal.
There are two groups of roofers, those affiliated with solar panel companies and those that are not. One group does not recommend them for coastal areas in Florida, the group after the Benjamins does. They made everyone in condos put their AC units (typically on the roof) in metal cages to prevent them from becoming projectiles. Over a decade ago, they forbid gas grills on balconies for the same reason.
The truth is, in a hurricane, ANY THING can become a projectile. In Miami, one Hurricane blew a convertible car sideways into a concrete building, looked like it was driving through the building.
The bigger problem with panels in Florida is they can damage the integrity of your roof. Sundance has much to say about the importance of an intact roof, windows and doors during a hurricane. They are getting better and more careful with the installations, but leaks can destroy entire walls in homes as well as the roof.
Your first question: That is called a “grid tie inverter”. If it doesn’t “see” the 60 Hz synchronization pulse on the “line” side, the inverter prevents power from being transferred to the main grid. The rooftop solar system must be synchronized with the main power lines or it would be “out of phase” and likely incinerate itself. So, this is a safety interlock. It also prevents back-feeding of the main line that might harm linemen or unsuspecting civilians. I doubt the rooftop solar panels will still be there after Idalia passes by. So, mute issue.
They become “KITES” sailing into your Neighbors homes..
I hope everyone finds safety and shelter.
Don’t forget the guys/gals with muddy boots.
I am going to do a couple of miles on the bicycle before these rain bands kick in. Maybe the increase in blood flow will help me remember anything else I can do to help get ready for this. I can’t stand the anticipation. It’s like waiting for a senior baseball stud to come and rough you up as a freshman who stole a kiss from his prom queen girlfriend. It will be bad, but just how bad? just wish I could get this over with already.
Be safe, C.R.
I was already thinking about the anxiety that everyone must be feeling while waiting for the storm to hit. It’s a normal emotion so get your mind on something else that pleases you. I think the anxiety causes many to use alcohol to relax and this is not a good thing to do when you need to stay alert for the next 24 hours.
NOTE!Have medications and supplies for 2 weeks for all household members! It will very likely be weeks without power for some people. Having enough provisions (don’tforget a manual can opener) and meds is crucial!
And drinkable water and water to flush toilets.
Can you just imagine how next-to-impossible recovery would be without fossil fuels and everything was electric?
🎯
I can, and I’d say some pushing this see it as a feature, not a bug.
Solar panels & windmill farms will be complete FAILURES in major hurricanes, tornadoes, snow cyclones & earthquakes.
Not only will they be destroyed…good luck trying to power civilization without fossil fuels.
Prayers for safe passage for all y’all Floridians!
With the influx of new people moving to Florida that have ZERO experience with hurricanes, I would imagine there will be widespread panic. It’s people like Sundance, the heroic front liners that will guide them through this.
🙏 from the PNW
Anyone who hasn’t experienced a Cat 3+ hurricane before needs to get out now. Make sure you have a full tank of gas and grab what is priceless and get moving. Now. Don’t wait. Identify your zone and evacuation routes. https://www.floridadisaster.org/planprepare/know-your-zone-know-your-home/
Take medicines, pet food, human food, water, essential documents, etc. Load up and get out. Some of the roads will be a parking lot, so expect delays. The earlier you leave, the better chances of getting out of the way of the storm. See if you can book a motel in Alabama, Mississippi, or Western Georgia, but expect much disappointment at this time. Better to escape the storm and sleep in your car than get flooded out and risk injury. Anything over a Cat 2 is time to leave if your property is at risk of flooding or if your home isn’t built to hurricane standards. This isn’t a game. These things are frightful.
At this point going to SE FL, to a place like Jupiter, wouldn’t be a bad idea for those who need to evacuate.
Hope it surely will not be as bad as they proclaim.
take care of bidness sundance. WE ARE ALL PRAYING FOR YOU AND YOURS. We will all be here tomorrow and the next day and the next and the days that follow. Don’t get your priorities mixed up…we ALL KNOW!
I am standing by with a full trailer loaded and ready to peel away in your direction. We have several spots to hit by wednesday nite. You have my personal email (adrem, yes?). Don’t hesitate. We have a home on the east side of florida as a temp accomodation or if things get screwy and your people just need to take a break and hang out in some ac, put toes in a pool and let the nerves ease.
IT IS GOING TO BE OKAY!
WE DO NOT FLINCH.
God Bless America
God Bless you and yours
R, regitiger
Lowe’s was running a good sale on mobile AC units last week. $2-300.00. I thought the prices were great considering we paid way more for ours just 3 years ago.
We live in southeast Louisiana and during/after hurricanes, we use our mobile AC with a generator. We cool only one room at a time to save on fuel although the unit could cool more space than this.
Prayers to those in Idalia’s path. We are only just now moving back into our house and tomorrow is the 2 year anniversary of Ida. Recovery can be a very long process but I’m sure Floridians know this as much as anyone.
Stay safe everyone. We’re praying for our friends in Florida.
This is probably a dumb question and asked and answered a thousand times – but I don’t know the answer.
Why aren’t the utilities underground?
Cost
In my area of Fl they started working on that issue approximately 2 yrs ago. When Trump is back in charge America’s infrastructure will be one of his top priorities, it will get done.
Not just cost; but repair complexity, too, I’d say. Say you have an electric line in a water saturated ground area and the pipe it is in fails; for instance.
Job security
Sundance, is there a way you can share some of your local CERT comms with me? I’d like to compare yours with ours here in eastern virginia.
Suggest e-mailing him (email address is in top lefthand corner of site).
Except that the email address is in the righthand corner (for me that’s called “the OTHER left hand”)!
Good grief!
Thank you for all you are doing. Please keep safe and may God bless your efforts. Amen
Down here in Naples ,had Tornado watch till 245 pm. Was windy and heavy rain. Now quiet since 3:15 pm. Am working security at an upscale outdoor mall across from the gulf. All stores here closed at 12pm instead of 6pm. 1 of 5 restaurants are busy. Work till 1 am so ride home could be challenging.
Praying for the best outcomes for all and help others when possible
Unfortunately, this is really going to amplify the broken home insurance situation in Florida. Stay safe and don’t take chances. We’ll be praying for y’all.
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In response to Hurricane Idalia, Mercy Chefs has already deployed its professional chefs to prepare high-quality hot meals for victims, first responders and volunteers. This is a faith-based, non-profit disaster and humanitarian relief organization worth supporting. Thank you and God Bless.
As always, Sundance, thank you for your wisdom you so freely share with all of us.
Godspeed and stay safe!!
Thank you, Sundance for your last few posts about the hurricane. They have been a fantastic refresher as well as new education, depending on the reader. I would like to make a plug for the best type of roof in Florida. I had a 1969 concrete tile roof. I needed to refresh it in 2016 in order to get Windstorm coverage. I used polyurethane foam. A team came and for $9000 sprayed a half inch of foam over the existing surface. It had the weight of tile and a complete seal from foam. It needs to be kept painted every five years. It did fantastically well through Ian.
And your wind insurance $ should of been cut by half?Hopefully.
Thank you sincerely Sundance for everything you do. You are absolutely best at helping people, as well as teaching people how they can better help themselves. That is so important.
My prayers for all who will be impacted by this storm. Extra special prayers go out to my friends and former neighbors in Gainesville, and for all those now attending my college alma mater. Go Gators!
Work at The Perry Hospital as It Admin, about 25 staff ridding it out here. Wish us luck, will post more later and afterwards if I can.
Will do better than that–praying for y’all’s safety!
Stay safe Young Man, you’re a Very Important Person. CYA on the other side!
For sure, can’t imagine a day without CTH. It would be a day w/o sunshine.
Absolutely! 👍
God speed everyone, Idalia looks huge. Batten down the hatches.
A good way to watch up close are the beach/surf and traffic live streaming cams.
As mentioned by others prior Ryan Hall Y’all on YouTube does a very good job. Currently there are 53K watching. A calm voice in the storm, without having to endure the every 30 second big pharma ads trying to peddle drugs for STD’s to the parents of young children.
When the PINE CONES & Hickory Nuts, Acorns, etc, are peeling off, it sounds like horses running across your roof & sounds of Large Rocks are beating on the Siding of your home, The sounds are dramatic.
NO KIDDING..
If your “blue house neighbor” has NO generator, BUT; has a extra long extension cord, SHARE! If Safely possible..
It’s also a time of reflection, getting too know your neighbor’s..
Had SEVERAL DAYS of Grilling & cook-outs & BBQ’s as meat(s) were thawing out, (those w/out generators) As I/WE had BBQ Grills & gas.. AND..
WARM Coffee each morning..
MORE THAN ONCE: Offered “First responders” BBQ plates, Ice cold water & Biscuits(s), for several Days on end.. It was VERY MUCH appreciated..
Diana
Fran
Florence
Bonnie
Bertha
Marco
Irene
Ophelia
Matthew
Isabel
Isaias
And many plain Jane Tropical Storms..
Sundance
Your description of the dead silence is so right on.
I was living in Kihei, Maui when the 1980 Kona storm hit.
It was never given an official name.
We lived 1 block from the south Kihei rd and had our store on the road.
I went out after the winds left and felt like I was the only person in the world.
No birds, no nothing.
Then I went to the beach and it was gone.
Steps down to it were in mid air probably 15 ft above the beach.
What a mess.
We spent the whole next day clearing gravel and dirt from the drainage grids.
Meatball made an appearance today with his tail between his legs. I turned him off, couldn’t stand the sight of him.
Thank you much, Sundance, for all you do!
Sent this great info to my 26 yo grandson, living in Lakeland.
Also, sent him your info LAST year when Ian hit.
Praying for ALL impacted.
May God shine His face upon you, and show you favor.
I’m just NW of Ocala. The eye keeps shifting west. Jim Cantore will be sad, as he was based on Cedar Key as of this morning. 😂
I’m ready, I’m now at the bread baking stage 😂
Sundance, you are Gold. Thanks for the post.
I’ve been through a few tropical storms and hurricanes in N FL.
In the morning after a big storm, walking out in the yard, the first sound you hear is a symphony of chain saws.
Music to my ears.
Sundance … I just found this in Doral FL … cannot vouch for them but it sounds good👇
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Central Florida here. This January will make 9 years I have lived here. Before I moved to Florida, I have only experienced 1 hurricane and that was in 1983? in Houston, hurricane Alicia. Since I have lived here, I have now experienced 6 hurricanes. Only 2 were semi-bad (power out for a week).
Sundance gives some great advice. If you prepare for the worst, then you should be OK. Doesn’t matter if the worst hits you or not, if it doesn’t, you will be prepared for the next time (and I will guarantee you there will be a next time, this is Florida after all). Keep your wits, help your neighbors if in need, and get through it. It’s a temporary inconvenience.
God has already blessed you, Sundance.
May he maintain his vigilance.
You are needed, he knows it – we all know it.
Stay strong and holler if you need back-up.
Seems like the storm has picked up some speed, rough guess 60 miles in 3 hours (vertical distance). 11 PM report may verify that. At Lakewood Ranch (sort of) I hardy know there is a storm outside. Hope it stays that way.
Letter to lib newspapers:
“How many good weather events have been blamed on climate change? Nuff said.”
Really? Human error? I swear it gets old being a conspiracy theorist.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/08/florida-gas-stations-receive-contaminated-fuel-right-before/
This month is also a Blue Moon month, the full moon affects the tides. Not a good time for a hurricane to be rolling through.
This is huge and needs to get out to all Florida Treepers immediately, I hope Sundance can find a moment to post a small bit about it on the front page. This could prove fatal for many people in the aftermath.
well, let’s have the headline and a selected amount of text:
Florida Gas Stations Receive Contaminated Fuel Right Before Hurricane Idalia Makes Landfall
The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) has reported fuel contamination could impact residents who are evacuating from Florida’s coast.
FDACS reported fuel contamination has occurred at dozens of gas stations that were serviced by the Port of Tampa.
In a press release, FDACS revealed, “Any fuel purchased after 10 a.m. on Saturday, August 26, at stations supplied by Citgo from the Port of Tampa has a strong likelihood of being contaminated with diesel fuel.”
Just so everyone knows, the stupid people are beginning to try to shape your thoughts about the weather. I haven’t seen a satellite photo of the storm, and even if I do, I might not be seeing what I am told I am seeing.
I live in Colorado and for a week we were bombarded with predictions of catastrophic rains because of a tropical storm that came up the Rio Grande and moved clear into central Arizona before changing direction towards the north and then to the east when it reached Idaho. At that time the predicted cool air mass from western Canada moved down east of the front range, which happens about this time every year and passes through as the first indicator of Fall weather in our area. The cool air was going to basically pull the warm air from the dissipating tropical storm back across the continental divide and create massive and sustained rainfall for several days. We were all under a severe thunderstorm threat and flash flood warnings with every cloud that formed from the collision of the two storm fronts. We would be getting unprecedented rainfall and flooding. There were stories that we had not been this affected by a Gulf of Mexico tropical storm in over 85 years. In those four days, we got a total of .45 inches of rain over only one night in my area, and the most recorded in four days was a total of 2.5 inches of rain in the northernmost areas of the State. We were shown no overall satellite photos of the “once in a century storm”. Of course, we remained under the flash flood warnings for four solid days and nights. That I know of, there was no flooding beyond what we would have expected from a localized severe thunderstorm that brings no rain to most areas and maybe an inch of rain right under the black cloud. The same seemingly dire predictions of even more rain and flash flooding were predicted for California a few days earlier. I don’t think they actually got much oddly severe weather either.
I have been watching the Climate Change activists at NOAA actually alter the daily high temperatures by rounding up the temperature reading averages every day for at least the 10 years that I have been reading the published totals, giving support to the bogus claims of the Global Warming crowd.
Sundance always tells us there are trillions at stake in the DC Swamp based on desired results. The science community is no stranger to doing whatever it takes to keep those Government research grants coming in. I used to think this was as much a function of my basic mistrust of anyone who gets to spend my tax dollars on their own pet projects but, after the unexplained tragedies in East Palestine and on the Island of Maui, I believe that there is a great amount of activity being blamed on the weather so as to create a belief in a basically preposterous Climate Change theory.
All the folks in Florida should make ready for any hurricane coming their way. Neighbors should stand ready to help each other when it happens. But I am watching to see if our Bureaucratic State is now working on the great narrative to make us all believe the catastrophic predictions of Climate Change, and whether they are actually trying to change the weather to support the hoax. We will know how to watch the weather like our ancestors did in order to protect themselves before long, if the hoax is allowed to continue unabated. The actions of FEMA in the aftermath of this hurricane may give us all the clue we need in order to focus on the truth.
I thank God for giving us the ability to try to make sense of everything we experience in our world. Anyone else trying to piece together recent weather events that don’t seem to make sense? God will speak to all of us in a way we will understand. This may be what will actually save our bacon from the “rich men north of Richmond.”
I understand your frustration. I think weather forecasters can easily become politicians and vice versa. Both lie left, right, and center, and they never own up to their “mistakes.”
I always dread when the forecasters give us a 100% chance of rain (which doesn’t happen often). Nine times out of ten, WE DON’T GET A DROP!
Great detailed easy to assimilate advise 👍
Sundance you are a treasure and inspiration to those of us who read your perspective regularly. God bless
Full ‘super moon’, closest to earth, brings highest tide along with Idalia. Highest tide plus storm surge……trouble.
Prayers for everyone in its path and praying for our place in the Plantation on St. George Island.
Sundance we have family outside Tally all the way down to Tampa. We expect a few will lose their homes. Shared this with them as the storm rolls in.
I’m so glad I landed on my branch, quite by accident, during the Zimmerman witchunt.
Thank you.
🙏🙏🙏
Truly appreciate your advice.
Prayers to all in path of the hurricane.
I don’t think I am ever leaving Arizona again: Typhoons and Tornados and Hurricanes and bears, oh my! I am serious and my prayers go out to everyone. Tornados scare me the worst and I might be one of those fools underestimating a Hurricane.
I did have a very good friend in Alaska who died via electrocution from a fallen electrical cable in Mexico. By odd chance, when I moved from Alaska to Arizona I ran into his brother and heard the story. It wasn’t a case of him being a dumbass. It was a small town in the middle of Mexico, with no government help, and he wanted to secure the powerline to make sure nobody got hurt.
RIP Hero.
You have spiders as big as chihuahuas. I’ll stay in Southwestern New York.
Yes but, like chihuahuas, they are mostly harmless. The annual tarantula march is happening right now and you can see them crossing the rural highways in droves. They are not interested in our women, just finding female tarantulas. We mostly just leave them alone and they leave us alone. I don’t know of any larger spiders than tarantulas, but I do know that southwestern New Yorkers plow a lot more snow than we do in southeastern Colorado. 🙂
Graveyard shift still covering Live:
LIVE – Meteorologist Covering Hurricane Idalia & Tornadoes – Live Weather Channel
Came here to post this.
Andy Hill is excellent, and will be joining Ryan Hall Y’all when he goes live.
Andy is a frequent live co-streamer with Ryan during storm events. IIRC, he has a Doctorate in this stuff.
TV weather folks watch these two, and learn.
What a comprehensive write up. Can you make this a paperback available to all?
BULLETIN
Hurricane Idalia Advisory Number 14
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL102023
1100 PM EDT Tue Aug 29 2023
…IDALIA STILL STRENGTHENING…
…FORECAST TO BE AN EXTREMELY DANGEROUS CATEGORY 4 INTENSITY AT
LANDFALL…
SUMMARY OF 1100 PM EDT…0300 UTC…INFORMATION
———————————————–
LOCATION…27.7N 84.5W
ABOUT 125 MI…200 KM W OF TAMPA FLORIDA
ABOUT 185 MI…300 KM S OF TALLAHASSEE FLORIDA
MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS…110 MPH…175 KM/H
PRESENT MOVEMENT…N OR 10 DEGREES AT 18 MPH…30 KM/H
MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE…958 MB…28.29 INCHES
I don’t live anywhere near Florida (though I was visiting during Frances, was that 2004?) but reading this one line jumped out at me: “Fuel is the lifeblood of recovery.”
It’s almost like hurricane recovery is a microcosm of the national economy.