Monday, September 2, 2019

To Evacuate ...

Or not to evacuate? That is the question.[Image of WPC QPF U.S. rainfall potential]
When you live this close to the ocean, hurricane season is a familiar drill. We have to evaluate the risks of staying against the trouble of leaving. Each hurricane is different. 

Florence (2018) came west across the Atlantic, making landfall south of us (about 2 hours' drive away), moving slowly as a Cat 1 storm with Cat 4 storm surge. The combination of surge and rainfall caused damage in our area. Rainfall amounts are greatly impacted by how long a hurricane sits on you, i.e. -- how fast it's moving. Florence slowed down as she hit land and made her "turn" south.
Hurricane Florence's path
Hurricane Arthur (2014) had a similar path to Hurricane Dorian, our current storm. A Cat 2, he skirted north along the coast from Florida, tapping Cape Lookout, NC (a couple of hours' drive from us), and heading north. We stayed for Arthur. He did little damage. We had some flooding, but nothing to worry about. He did not stall out, which kept flooding low.
Hurricane Arthur's path
Hurricane Irene (2011) left much damage in our area, although Florence was worse. A Cat 1 storm, she had unimpressive windspeeds but high rainfall. She also made landfall at Cape Lookout. Her position over Pamlico Sound caused her to dump water into the sound like a pitcher pouring water into a bucket, which pushed that water up the rivers and creeks.
Hurricane Irene's path
It's impossible to say where Hurricane Dorian will go. Some people evacuate inland, only to find themselves in the storm's path. Sometimes flooding is horrific along the rivers and tributaries 3 hours inland, with no flooding at all on the Outer Banks.

For Hurricane Florence, I evacuated early, went far far away, and stay gone until the electricity came back on. It was a good call. But I'm confused about Dorian. He looks a lot like Arthur, who was a gentleman as he passed by. Last year in Florence, our ground was already saturated from 6 months of rain; this year we've had drought. Will Dorian plow through quickly? That helps. Will he shift west and come directly overhead? Yikes! Evacuation is difficult because of uncertainty, and even with weather models and warnings a week ahead of time, hurricanes are still quite uncertain.

I haven't decided yet. I will decide within the next 24 hours. After that, it may well be too late to evacuate easily.

9 comments:

GretchenJoanna said...

May God guide you. He will be with you in any case!! XO

Lisa Richards said...

Prayers for wisdom and safety!

Retired Knitter said...

I have been glued to my TV with this storm. My Aunt lives just south of Daytona Beach - within walking distance to the ocean on a barrier island. Her house has been uniquely prepared over 30 years for these hurricanes and has never even destroyed or even damaged. But storm surge is a real concern and nothing can be done to avoid this but maybe a house on stilts. Her house is not on stilts. She is now 85 years old and her kids are in other states - she is holed up in a hotel so she will probably be ok, but you never know. I spoke with her last week. She is FINALLY ready to leave this area - sell and move. Finally!! Prayers for you, for you aunt and for all those in the path of this dangerous weather event.

Ronda@islandmother said...

Saying prayers for you.

Nancyteatime said...

Thinking of you - and mama chicken. Take care...

M.K. said...

Yes, He is!

M.K. said...

Thank you, Lisa!

M.K. said...

I hope she weathered this storm well, RK. Florida was not hit as badly as it often is. It's a good thing she is ready to move outa there!

M.K. said...

Aww, Nancy. Thank you. Miss Henny Penny is one tough bird. I don't think any hurricane is gonna scare her!