Ian Comin' - FL Hurricane

Submitted by XM - Mt 1822 on September 27th, 2022 at 6:55 PM

Mates,

Hurricane Ian is set to whack Florida, mostly in the west coast and into Tampa.  I know we have many FL Wolverines and probably some in the path of that storm.   The storm is forecast to 110 MPH winds and 10-13" of rain.  Wild to think that if that moisture was up north in the cold, it would be a 10x or 20x for snow.  

NOAA warnings include: 

- THREAT TO LIFE AND PROPERTY THAT INCLUDES TYPICAL FORECAST UNCERTAINTY IN TRACK, SIZE AND INTENSITY: Potential for wind greater than 110 mph - The wind threat has remained nearly steady from the previous assessment. - PLAN: Plan for extreme wind of equivalent CAT 3 hurricane force or higher. - PREPARE: Remaining efforts to protect life and property should be urgently completed. Prepare for catastrophic wind damage. - ACT: Move to safe shelter before the wind becomes hazardous.

- POTENTIAL IMPACTS: Devastating to Catastrophic - Structural damage to sturdy buildings, some with complete roof and wall failures. Complete destruction of mobile homes. Damage greatly accentuated by large airborne projectiles. Locations may be uninhabitable for weeks or months. - Numerous large trees snapped or uprooted along with fences and roadway signs blown over. - Many roads impassable from large debris, and more within urban or heavily wooded places. Many bridges, causeways, and access routes impassable. - Widespread power and communications outage

Hurricane Ian Makes Many Aspects of SMU at UCF Plans Difficult - Inside ...

 

The NFL has Miami on the road Thursday night up in Cincy, but Tampa is supposed to play on Sunday at home vs. KC.  Some college games will be affected, including SMU v. UCF.  

1.  Stay safe FL Wolverines

2.  How many of us have been in/through hurricanes, in Florida or elsewhere? 

XM 

The Geek

September 27th, 2022 at 7:01 PM ^

I think your winds and rainfall are a little optimistic. As soon as Ian hits the Gulf it will increase in intensity. 
I live in St Augustine (east coast for the those geographically challenged) and we are preparing for >18inches in rain. That’s no joke. 

St Joe Blues

September 27th, 2022 at 10:06 PM ^

I just read that the forecast changed and it's supposed to speed up. The eyewall is going through a replacement cycle which will intensify it but speed it up. Praying that happens.

A good friend's daughter is in her first year of teaching in Ft Myers. It's her 3rd year overall as the first 2 were spent safely teaching in Grenada. 

stephenrjking

September 27th, 2022 at 7:09 PM ^

A good follow for stuff like this is @ryanmaue, a meteorologist who did his undergrad at Michigan (and worked at the AA-Saline rd Meijer, where I shared cashiering work with him for a year) before moving south. He produces some great model work and puts good stuff on twitter. 

UferTime

September 27th, 2022 at 7:17 PM ^

Recently sold our home in Ft. Myers and are safe and sound in the comforts of Ann Arbor this month, but have to deal with the fear and concern for two young adult sons and loads of friends and colleagues all within the current target. The missus is having an especially rough go at the moment.  As Mr. Petty said, the waiting truly is the hardest part.

 

Johnny Blood

September 27th, 2022 at 7:19 PM ^

Good luck to everyone, stay safe. 
 

I lived through Ike in Houston - lost power for 2 weeks, a tree hit our house (fortunately didn’t break through the roof) and water almost came through the doors. The only thing that saved us was the storm moved fast or we would have been underwater. No fun but all things considered we were very lucky. A lot of folks closer to the shore and in Galveston got hit very hard. 

carolina blue

September 27th, 2022 at 7:28 PM ^

Further inland here, they moved the South Carolina game from Saturday to Thursday night. I’m assuming Clemson will do the same, but no word yet. We’re supposed to get 3-5” rain and 30-40mph winds with 60-ish gusts. Obviously nothing close to hurricane level, but still enough to down trees and make driving high profile vehicles dangerous. 

Team 101

September 27th, 2022 at 7:29 PM ^

My mom lives in Longboat Key and evacuated this morning.  She is with a friend who lives farther inland.  I don't think I will be sleeping much tonight.

GET OFF YOUR H…

September 28th, 2022 at 7:38 AM ^

I lived on Longboat Key.  We were always protected by some unknown source, the hurricanes always went up the coast north, or across the state well south.  Some weird vortex that didn't allow direct hits.  The fact that this is going that way is terrifying.  Longboat Key is exposed, and they just freaking re-built the Pier after it was destroyed a while back!

SWFLWolverine

September 28th, 2022 at 8:43 AM ^

If this holds course, it will be my first direct hit. Charley was small, so while the eye went through 15 miles south of me (North Port), we may have barely had hurricane force winds. Irma we got winds over 100 MPH, and I would walk around my house because of the trees on empty lots and the fact that my house is situate in the middle of a triple curve over a 1/4 mile stretch that doesn't really allow the winds to rip through where I am. We did, however, lose power for over a week due to Irma.

We have had gusts over 30 MPH consistently since mid-night and power has been flashed off and on a few times already, so that does not bode well as the eye approaches. Things should get interesting here in the next 5 hours.

Blue Ninja

September 27th, 2022 at 7:57 PM ^

I have Michigan family that live in that area, hoping they've all evacuated. Meanwhile I live in South Carolina where we always seem to get hit with remnants of any Gulf or south Atlantic coast hurricanes. Probably a lot of rain and some wind when it gets here. But occasionally they do hit hard even here, Hugo hit my area for instance and caused a lot of damage. 

1VaBlue1

September 28th, 2022 at 9:33 AM ^

I was stationed in Charleston when Hugo came through.  We had just left a week earlier and were half-way to our station in the North Atlantic when we saw that Hugo made a hard left directly into Charleston.  Had some sad campers worrying about family on board for the next couple of months.  Nothing but 60-word telegrams, called 'family-grams', for submarine crews at the time.  They were one-way, receive only, and were subject to censor from the CO to scrub anything truly sad.  They had extra importance on that trip until we got back home...

ShadowStorm33

September 27th, 2022 at 8:14 PM ^

I was in DC for the "hurricane" that hit in 2015, including being at the Maryland game that was supposed to be a night game and got moved up to noon at the last minute to get ahead of the storm. The whole thing was a big nothingburger.

I was also in Hawaii during a tropical storm around 20 years ago, and that was the craziest thing I've ever seen. Unbelievable rain and lightning, wind so strong trees were bent completely over. Even the next day after it had blown through, the wind was still gusting at 40-50mph and debris was flying everywhere...

gweb

September 27th, 2022 at 8:14 PM ^

We live in Venice Florida which is looking like ground zero for the storm. We left this afternoon knowing it’s likely not to be fun and headed southeast to Boca Raton and are staying at hotel with the family and dog - beautiful area. Got a Go Blue at dinner!! 

Zopak

September 27th, 2022 at 8:40 PM ^

Went through Maria in Southern Miami and it was a shitshow. No electricity for a week and a half, cell phones coverage was shit. Was forced to work until two hours before her arrival. Overall, glad to be back in the Mitten.

ShadowStorm33

September 28th, 2022 at 12:47 PM ^

I make the point quite a bit, but for all the "problems" the Midwest has--the Rust Belt and all that--we are very lucky. We don't get hurricanes, we don't get earthquakes, tornados are rare (unlike the Plains), we have the largest source of fresh water in the country (and pretty much the world), and relatedly we don't get the wildfires like out West, etc. From a resource and natural disaster standpoint, there's really no better place in the country you could be.

S.G. Rice

September 27th, 2022 at 9:05 PM ^

Going to get chased out of Myrtle Beach, forecast is for 6-8 inches of rain, which is nothing compared to what Florida is facing but more than enough to shut down outdoor activity 

Don

September 27th, 2022 at 9:06 PM ^

My purely unscientific and entirely subjective experience is that frequently the media hysteria about an impending "Michigan Snowpocalypse 20__" is inversely proportional to the actual damage. I hope that's the case down in Florida.