Archive for the 'Hurricane Preparedness' Category

Getting Prepared For Hurricane Season

Today marks the start of the 2009 Northeast Pacific Hurricane Season.

Living in Central Florida, we have another 15 days to wait until the Atlantic Hurricane Season begins, but we have done a few things to prepare already. A few months ago, we wrote an article asking Are you prepared? which gives you a general, getting started list, as well as common sense tips and tricks that people who have lived in Hurricane prone areas should already know. We know not everyone has lived in Florida all their lives — as a matter of fact, most “Florida Natives” have moved on, giving way to the “snow birds” and people who move here for our wonderful weather. We need to help those new residents understand what it means to live in Florida (or any hurricane prone area) during Hurricane Season.

After Andrew in 1992, South Florida remembered what it was to be in the path of a major hurricane, and became more vigilant in not only their reporting, but in their hurricane preparedness community awareness programs. Central Florida in 2004 was struck by 4 hurricanes, with each storm passing over the center of the state in a criss cross fashion. Louisiana had a perfect storm scenario with Katrina in 2005 which showed the residents why Hurricane Parties were really created – to get the community together, prepare and then wait out the storm.

Each region of the Atlantic and Golf of Mexico coast has its own story. But what about the Caribbean? Last year, no fewer than 4 hurricanes or tropical storms crossed through the Caribbean, striking Cuba multiple times, and flooding the islands. Some of the worst flooding was from Fay, which moved slowly over the region and caused floods from the Caribbean islands to northern Florida. Ike and Paloma were the largest strength storms, both Category 4 hurricanes on the Saffir-Simpson scale, and both were hurricanes which struck Cuba.

History tells us a lot about how to prepare. Learning from our mistakes is a great human trait we all have, which enables us to adjust to our changing environment. Hurricanes are great and wonderfully powerful beasts which can take us from being the most technologically advanced people, back to the equivalent of a third world country, or at best, camping. Preparing like you are going TENT camping for at least a week, with no chance to re-stock or re-supply is the best way to handle preparing for a hurricane. Everything you need should be on hand. Remember: no power means no electronics. Even cell phones only last a very short time until the battery backups at the cellular towers die. You might have extra batteries or power supplies, but if you can’t get a connection, your device will not help you.

Preparing for hurricane season may seem like a waste when hurricanes seemingly never strike. What happens though, if a hurricane does strike this year? Will you be prepared? The government CANNOT be your keeper. When disaster strikes, the best way to get through it is by neighbors helping neighbors.

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National Hurricane Conference and Storm Surge

With 21 days to go until the Northeast Pacific Hurricane season begins, and 38 days until the Atlantic Hurricane Season begins, it is time to make sure you are prepared.

April 6-10 was the National Hurricane Conference. This year it was held in Austin, Texas and covered a lot of great information including specifics about Ivan and it’s effects on the people of Texas. One of the major subjects of discussion was the Saffir-Simpson scale. Some say that the scale does not accurately portray the storm surge of a hurricane. I feel that the real problem is the lack of understanding of storms which are very strong (major) while out in the Gulf of Mexico, but weaken as they come closer to land.

Scenario – Hurricane WhatsHerName:

Hurricane WhatsHerName is a category 5 hurricane out in the Caribbean and moves into the Gulf of Mexico, hitting no land. The storm remains a category 5 hurricane for greater than 24 hours. The storm surge of WhatsHerName according to the Saffir-Simpson Scale is expected to be greater than 18ft at landfall, if it remains a category 5 hurricane.

WhatsHerName runs into some shear before coming to land in the Gulf of Mexico, dropping her winds and making her a cateogry 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale. WhatsHerName is within 36 hours of land, storm warnings are posted. Since her winds have brought her down to a category 3 hurricane, the scale says that her storm surge should be 9-12ft, if you take the scale literally. However, the physics of water tells us that we should really be expecting a greater storm surge because the larger water base has been stirred into action, and water does not slow as quickly as winds. So, in reality, you should be expecting somewhere between category 4 (13-18ft) and category 5 ( greater than 18ft) storm surge with this category 3 storm.

The Saffir-Simpson scale works great when you are going up the scale. However, the flaw is when you come down the scale. It is my belief however that the scale is not at fault, but the understanding of the physics behind storm surge by the media and possibly our models which informs the public of what to expect. The models are getting better however, and we now have experimental storm surge data which will be available for the 2009 hurricane season.

With any luck though, our weather media will be able to do a great job of educating the public on what to expect this year, and hopefully prevent a large amount of the problems we see when the storms come our way this year.

In the mean time, make sure you are prepared for hurricane season this year. You can never prepare too early, only too late.

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Two Months Until Atlantic Hurricane Season Begins… Are you prepared?

With two months until the Atlantic Hurricane Season begins, it is time to start getting our hurricane kits back in order. Everyone knows the standards:

  • Flashlights
  • Batteries
  • weather radio
  • battery/solar/hand crank radio or tv
  • canned goods
  • one gallon of water per person per day for one week
  • water on hand for sanitation (toilets, washing)
  • Baby wipes (even if you don’t have babies!)
  • non-chlorine bleach and water tablets (to sanitize water & clean)
  • camp stove or other non-electric cooking appliance
  • propane for the camp stove, or appropriate fuel
  • fill your car with gas
  • have cash on hand (power out means no ATM)

What all of this really means is – pretend you’re going camping for at least a week in the wilderness.  You will have no access to any of your normal amenities, so you need to have it all on hand.  Some of these things you will use and replenish, but need to make sure to keep on hand.  Usually those are perishable food items like:

  • Milk
  • Bread
  • Dairy products
  • Lunch/Sandwhich meats
  • ICE — get a few bags to keep your freezer cold!

These are just the things that I am listing off of the top of my head.  I haven’t looked at a list yet this year, but I’ve lived in Florida all my life and prepare every year.  Nothing we buy ever goes to waste, since everything we buy is used at one point or another.  As I was writing the list, I found myself writing ideas in too, for instance how to keep things cold, and when to buy.  These are some of the best practices that I know of:

Ice:

  • Get enough ice to keep your freezer cold, and if you have a deep freeze, store the ice there.
  • have a container on hand which will fit a block of ice and your refrigerator.  This will keep your cold goods cold a lot longer, and will work even better if you keep the refrigerator shut as much as possible.

Groceries:

  • When you go grocery shopping before a storm, make sure you buy food which does not require milk, butter, and other perishable products.  If you use this rule, you will have more food which you can make, even if your refrigerator of food goes bad.
  • Do not stock up on extra perishable goods!  Because when a storm hits, the first thing to go is the power, make sure that you do not put a lot of money into your refrigerator or freezer.  When you buy milk, make it powdered milk, or at least have powdered milk on hand for recipes that need it.  Only buy enough perishable goods to last you as long as your extra ice will last.  After that point, your food will go bad and with it, the extra money spent.

Fuel:

  • Make sure that you not only fill up your car, but during hurricane season it is a good idea to not let your gas tank get below 1/3 to 1/4th of a tank.  A lot of people use this as a rule, but with tight times, you may want to wait as long as possible before you refill your car.  If you let your car get too low,  you will not have the fuel in your car to get you to where you CAN buy more.  Most gas stations do NOT have generators on hand for the fuel pumps, so when the electricity is gone, so is the gas.
  • Have fuel on hand for your chainsaw if you have one.  Even if you do not have trees that fall in your yard, you may want to help your neighbors out who were not so lucky, and maybe do not have their own chainsaw.  What about if you don’t use it for this storm?  If you store the fuel pure (without adding 2cycle oil or other mix) you can always use the fuel later in your car, or compatible gas engine.
  • Have fuel on hand for your grill, cook stove or other cooking appliance.  Depending on what you have, this means propane, charcoal or wood.  If there is a storm, there will be plenty of wood.  Find your friend with the chainsaw and axe :)

Water:

  • One of the best ways to store water is in a bath tub.  We usually fill our large bath tub with water as a storm is coming in, and that water can be used for anything from flushing the toilet to drinking water.  We have never had damage to our home, but definitely consider the fact that damage to the house would dirty that water.  It is still good for flushing and maybe washing, depending on the extent of the damage.  Consider using a sheet or other fine material you normally have on hand as a filter if the worst case happens.
  • One of the things which I found last year on Bryan Norcross’s site was a Water Safe.  This is a device which fits into your tub or sink, and is then filled with water.  This is a very neat idea which I can see being very useful.

Medical / Emergency:

  • Make sure you have all medications filled ahead of the storm, and have at least a weeks supply on hand.
  • If you have a condition which requires you to stay at the local hospital to ride out the storm, then please do!  Emergency vehicles are not allowed — for their own safety — to venture out into a storm once it reaches a certain strength (I think sustained tropical storm force winds, but possibly sustained hurricane force winds).  This means that they cannot get to you to get you out.  Downed trees, tree limbs and powerlines could also prevent them from getting to you soon after a storm.  Be safe, and evacuate to a hospital if you know you should.
    • In Miami, the drop in pressure from Hurricane Andrew caused many women in their last trimester of pregnancy to go into labor that night.  If those women would have stayed home, they would have had their babies on their own, where the potential for complications would be much greater, and no medical personnel able to get to them to help.
    • In New Orleans, people who were “in the bowl” were unable to leave their homes once the levees broke right after Katrina.  Even though the storm surge did not affect their homes, they still became trapped.  While the loss of property could not have been prevented that day, the emergency rescues could have been.  The storm surge was larger than anticipated because the winds dropped before Katrina hit land, which made some assume that the storm surge would also recede.  There was a failure to understand that the power of a wall of water cannot be easily diminished, and in the Gulf of Mexico, where the waters are more shallow, the water tends to rise more like a tsunami.  In everything hurricane, even if your local news station tells you not to worry, yet the National Hurricane Center tells you to get out of doge, I would listen to the NHC.  They have MANY more years of study than your local news personality behind the desk.
  • In short, be prepared and know your environment and your limitations.

Kids:

  • Consider this:  you have kids who are accustomed to having TVs, video game consoles, computers, hand held game devices and other immediate gratification for entertainment.  What happens when that is not available?  For most parents, it means insanity – not for the kids but for the parents!
  • Make sure that you have things to do, on hand which do not require batteries, or any sort of electricity. Some samples:
    • Card games
      • Playing cards, as well as games like Fluxx, Chrononauts, Burn Rate, Uno, Pokemon, and Yugio. This could be the only chance you get to truly unplug with your family
    • board games
    • puzzles
    • books
    • word games
    • other non-electronic “things to do” should be on hand for your own personal sanity.
  • Be prepared to sit down and talk to your family!  Your kids will have their fears, let them talk to you about them, even if it drives you a little batty.  Your kids have probably never gone through anything like a major hurricane, and if you’re lucky, you haven’t either.  Your child’s fears may seem small compared to yours, but helping them get through those fears could save them a lot of therapy later, and it could save you too!

Fans:

  • It is a great idea to have a battery, solar, human or other powered fan available after the storm. 
    • When hurricane Andrew came through Broward county in 1992, power at my house was knocked out for a week.  There was little to no breeze and it was the end of August — the hottest part of the summer.  I had a hand held fan that I used constantly, which added to my comfort in a big way.  Just the little bit of a blowing breeze was enough.  I’ve grown up with having air conditioning my whole life, and parents that like to set the thermostat to what seems to be sub-zero.  I do not deal well with heat at all, yet I live in Florida.  Go figure.

The most important thing to do is to have a plan, and follow through with it.  During Hurricane Season, you can never be too prepared.  It is a personal responsibility that each person must take upon themselves.  Help will not arrive the morning after a storm, so being prepared for the storm is always the right course.

There are lots of things which are not listed here, like generators, ductape, and more.  Let us know how you prepare for hurricane season, and don’t forget to mention where you live so others in your area can relate to your ideas!


Are you looking for more information on hurricanes and hurricane preparedness?  Try these links:

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Saffir-Simpson Scale

All hurricanes are dangerous, but some more so than others. The way storm surge, wind, and other factors combine determines the hurricane’s destructive power. To make comparisons easier-and to make the predicted hazards of approaching hurricanes clearer to emergency forces-National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s hurricane forecasters use a disaster-potential scale which assigns storms to five categories.

Category 1 is a minimum hurricane; category 5 is the worst case. The criteria for each category in the table shown below:

Category Central Pressure Maximum Winds Storm Surge
Tropical Depression 38 mph / 34 kts or less 4-5 ft.
Tropical Storm > 980 mb or 28.94 in 39-73 mph or 34-63 kts 4-5 ft.
1 – Minimal < 980 mb or 28.94 in 74-95 mph or 64-83 kts 4-5 ft.
2 – Moderate 965-979 mb or 28.50-28.91 in 96-110 mph or 65-96 kts 6-8 ft.
3 – Extensive 945-964 mb or 27.91-28.47 in 111-130 mph or 97-113 kts 9-12ft.
4 – Extreme 920-944 mb or 27.17-27.88 in 131-155 mph or 114-135 kts 13-18 ft.
>5 – Catastrophic < 920 mb or 27.17 in > 155 mph or 135 kts > 18 ft.

* – The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale is based on Windspeed alone, the pressures are only included as a general reference and may not always apply

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Hurricane Season Travel Information

Hurricane Season runs in different times for each ocean, sea or basin.  We often receive questions about when hurricane season is, and when the best time to travel would be if you needed to travel during hurricane season.  The information below changes on a season to season, and day to day basis, based on the conditions of the area and should ALWAYS be verified with the National Hurricane Center or the local authorities in the area you plan to visit.

Regular Hurricane Season Dates:

Atlantic, Carribean, Gulf of Mexico

June 1 – November 30

Northeast Pacific

May 15 – November 30

Central Pacific including Hawaiian Islands

June 1 – November 30

In each of these areas, based on historical data, which was completely ignored by the Atlantic hurricanes during the 2005 extremely active, record breaking Atlantic hurricane season, the best time to visit would be in June and July, and again in late October and November.  August,  September and early October are considered the height of the season which means there is a much greater chance of a hurricane in these waters at this time.  Hurricane Season is just that though, it is the time when hurricanes develop in these waters, therefore if you make plans to travel to these areas during the season, you should also have a backup plan, as well as travel insurance!

What would you do if you made travel plans in the Carribean during August, and a category 3 hurricane hits the island the week before you are scheduled to arrive?

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