Cookiely wrote:I appreciate your advice and thoughts on the topic. I have a question. With Hillsborough County having such a large population, if your not asked to evacuate, should you evacuate. It just seems it would multiply the problems on the road for those having to evacuate, if the ones also left that didn't. And just like last year, when the storm seemed like a direct hit on Tampa, and the population went to Orlando and got hit harder than if they would have stayed home. Unless you go out of state, there is no certainty that you will be able to avoid the storm. And lets not even mention the people who don't have the money for gas and lodging which brings up the terrible situation with our shelters not being safe.
In the Florida Peninsula, you evacuate to escape the storm surge, not to get out of the way of the winds. As we saw with Charley last year, you can't second guess where a storm will go. Just a slight turn before landfall can make a BIG difference in the hurricane's effects. So you drive to somewhere that is over 25-30 ft elevation and ride it out in something other than a mobile home.
That said, Tampa Bay would be a death trap. The very shallow coastal waters combined with the amplifying effect of a storm surge moving into the Bay could, in effect, cause the storm surge to be about double what it would be otherwise. So a Cat 3 with a 12-15 foot storm surge on the outer coast could produce a surge nearly double that in northern parts of the Bay. Unless your home is higher than that, you need to get out. Now this assumes the hurricane is coming from the south to the west. Hurricanes that hit the eastern Peninsula don't produce a surge as they exit the western Peninsula.







