#5 Postby beoumont » Fri Jul 15, 2011 10:43 am
Yes, "only" 19 people died during the storm itself (and another 2 dozen died during the cleanup from electrocution, severe glass cuts, large objects falling on them). Considering the intensity of the hurricane that is an amazingly low figure, as you noted.
Luckily, Andrew was a very small hurricane; and it accelerated to a 22 mph forward speed as it crossed S. Florida. The truly destructive winds lasted around 45 minutes. As the personal account of a friend (below) indicates, if the wind had continued much longer, many more would have died as the rest of their homes would have collapsed on them. The short duration of extreme winds left many, many people huddled in the one last strong-point left of their dwellings.
Below is the account of a friend / NHC employee who lived very close to where you did, near Caribbean Dr, just west of US 1.
And yes, very few concrete block homes (which most are in S. Florida) that had secure roofs, whose windows were boarded up, and were built before the relaxed building codes went into effect in the 1980s, survived quite well.
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Below is the account of Miguel and his experience during Andrew:
Well I worked 24 out of the last 36 before the storm, then I had to go and board the 2 houses I had.
I was taking even bus benches apart when hm-depot ran out of plywood.
Yes we were in the house when it finally struck!!
What a ride!! All shi_ broke loose when that baby hit.
I was looking threw the space between the plywood's and a 20-25 ft tree limb floated in front of the house then hit the kitchen window and exploded inward sending an 8" piece of glass that almost went into my head.
It got my arm and I was bleeding like mad. I just wrapped a towel around it.
I was actually on the phone with a friend that left the area before it stuck.
That's when all hell broke loose. I then flipped over and hit the roof and put a hole the size of a small car in the roof, now that storm came into the house. It looked like the wizard of OZ inside.
Every thing started to rotate inside being lifted into the air, the sliding glass door was shooting water in like a fire hydrant and every one else was in the bathroom.
The whole house fell in.
The light pole in front of the house sheared off, I had two Chevy Impala cars in front that where dancing around like they where floating.
And yes we had about a half hour, maybe more of calm before the show started again.
The house felt like it twisted on it's foundation and that's when I got scared.
But we survived and what doesn't kill you WILL make you stronger!!
My wife's hair actually turned white the next day!!
Like I said "It was the best ride I ever was in"!!!
Yours Truly,
Miguel '
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