Eileen and I have had more than our fair share of hurricanes (Michael #14, Katrina #13) and again I am a bit flabbergasted at how much difference 116 miles (in this case) makes (but not so much for a for Sandy or a Katrina).
One hour prior to landfall, we were taking our usual 2 hour power walk on the Trout Point boardwalk on Big Lagoon. You can see it on Google satellite view. The official airport report had winds from the north at 15 and gusts to 25, but felt more like 10mph and gusts to 15-20 to us. No whitecaps on Big Lagoon (unlike the past 4 days, when local conditions caused them). We were in the great green bands seen on radar, but it was just drizzle. Many families with young kids were on the boardwalk watching the distant huge cresting waves pound Johnson Beach just across the ICW.
We are not in an evacuation or surge zone and were perfectly safe. Always comply with local officials advice on evacuation and surge risk. I’m just commenting on the AMAZING difference it can make being just 116 miles (straight line) on the West side of an otherwise DEVASTATING Cat 4 storm with documented 155MPH winds.
Another hats off to Honda, our two 2000iu generators have not ever been started or run since Sept 15, 2015, but as soon as gas got to the carbs, both purred right up. Use only non-ethanol gas with Startron and drain the carbs if you don’t ‘exercise’ them monthly on a load. That gets tiresome when there are no significant storms between 2005 and 2018.
Our best wishes and prayers for those impacted as Michael tears along, esp for Marc Grove and the Wefings family as they recover.
Wefings strong!
John