Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All those recent transplants thought the august humidity was the hard part… now they will see why Florida was cheap for so long.
F off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I live in Florida now (in Tampa Bay). But I lived in CT for a long time and we had hurricanes too (Gloria, Irene, Sandy...) plus Nor'easters, blizzards and that crazy Oct snowstorm in 2011 that did so much power line damage.
I chose to NOT live on the water or in an evacuation zone. I'm prepared for tomorrow. It's been awhile since it was like this (2017 in this area).
Yeah but losing power in CT not the same as FL sept week with out AC Or water!
Anonymous wrote:All those recent transplants thought the august humidity was the hard part… now they will see why Florida was cheap for so long.
Anonymous wrote: I live in Florida now (in Tampa Bay). But I lived in CT for a long time and we had hurricanes too (Gloria, Irene, Sandy...) plus Nor'easters, blizzards and that crazy Oct snowstorm in 2011 that did so much power line damage.
I chose to NOT live on the water or in an evacuation zone. I'm prepared for tomorrow. It's been awhile since it was like this (2017 in this area).
Anonymous wrote:All those recent transplants thought the august humidity was the hard part… now they will see why Florida was cheap for so long.
Anonymous wrote:Hurricanes are important because they force people to think, to plan, and to deal with adversity and discomfort.
Lots of people will learn from these next few days, and overall that’s a good thing. Complacency/laziness is never a virtue.