Actually, North Carolina is tied for third with Louisiana, which isn’t bad whichever way you cut it.
(yes, I am a hurricane junkie!)
Actually, North Carolina is tied for third with Louisiana, which isn’t bad whichever way you cut it.
(yes, I am a hurricane junkie!)
Why live in Florida? Well, it’s home. And it never snows and is seldom cold. It has beaches and fishing and lots of fun things. This is the first year in my entire life (38 years, all in Florida) that I’ve had to deal with this much storm danger/damage.
Here’s a pretty neat first-hand account of Frances …
One thing no one has mentioned is the sizzling muffled explosions of transformers blowing up during a hurricane. As I sat terrified in my living room, listening to Hurricane Andrew roar through, I remember that most of all. And knowing that for each explosion I heard, it would be that. much. longer. without electricity.
Most hurricanes I lived through in Florida were not very powerful by the time they hit, so it was just like a hard rain that lasted for days and days. I’m temporarily out of the state but according to some of my family in Orlando hurricane Charley was so strong that their ears started popping from the pressure outside.