psneeld
Guru
You compare these storms by where they land. If you’re on the right side of the eye the storm is pushing water and the big surge into you. If it lands at high tide or even worse a high Spring tide then levels will be much higher. Tampa dodged a bullet with Ian as they caught the left side of the eye which blew all the water out. Many people don’t understand this and proclaim my boat and my house rode out Hurricane - - - - with little damage but the fact is worst case damage always occurs on the right side of the eye. So you can have a bad blow pass you with minimal damage if your on the good side.
If I was on the East coast of Florida and had enough time based on storm forecast I’d run for the St John’s River and go up so far I couldn’t find anything but mullet boats. A lot of commercial guys still consider this big river good shelter.
Rick
Sure I get the dangerous semicircle and all that...but there is a boatload more than just being on one side or the other that determines damage.
I too have a bit of history, even professionally with canes. Evacutions have to balance variables, not just right or left side even though it can be huge it still has to be just part of the factoring (at least the way I was trained and executed).
What I was pointing out about Sandy and Ian is 2 diversely powerful storms can have similar damage totals based on many factors... including preparations both long and short term. But look at the storms and how long people had to evaluate what they were going to be and where they were going is almost incomparable from my viewpoint.
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