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Some storm-savvy Floridians shrug, others flee or bunker down

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Michael James was boarding over the last two windows of his house on Florida's east coast. The first gusty blasts of wind were announcing Hurricane Dorian's imminent arrival, and most residents had fled. But James, an old hand at this, knew he had a few hours to go before leaving.

"Guess what?" he said. "A real hurricane is a lot different than what people see on TV -- it's much worse."

James, who is 63, has not forgotten the two times he was caught in hurricanes while working on oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico in the 1980s.

On television, he told an AFP reporter, "you never get the concept. You never get the speed or anything."

Monster storm Dorian was downgraded Monday to a still-powerful Category 4 as it lumbers slowly across the Bahamas toward the Florida coast.

Residents there -- those who haven't already evacuated -- have been keeping a nervous eye on the news, hoping the storm will make the promised northward turn before rumbling into the mainland.

Residents of Port Saint Lucie, a medium-sized city midway up the state's Atlantic coast, is expected to have its closest encounter with the massive storm late Tuesday or early Wednesday.

People here know what they must do. Many area businesses are already closed and boarded up, and shelters have begun to fill up as the skies take on a more ominous cast.

Mobile home neighborhoods along the Indian River are now nearly deserted, the fragile vinyl and aluminum structures protected in cursory fashion.

But many long-time Floridians are keeping their humor, saying they know from experience what to expect.

- 'Enjoy the experience' -

Any tips for a hurricane first-timer?

A man takes a photo of the sea as Hurricane Dorian approaches in Deerfield Beach  Florida on Septemb...
A man takes a photo of the sea as Hurricane Dorian approaches in Deerfield Beach, Florida on September 2, 2019
Michele Eve Sandberg, AFP

Stacey Ewers, who has spent 35 of her 56 years in Florida, breaks into a smile.

"Just enjoy the experience," she says, taking a break from boarding up her windows with leftover wood -- her supply of plywood long since exhausted.

She admitted being just "a bit nervous," but added: "The hard part is cleaning up, it's not the storm. The hard part is after the storm."

Barrier islands -- low-lying, elongated islets of sand -- protect much of the state's Atlantic coast.

Residents of those islands are under mandatory evacuation orders, and police are preparing to close the bridges that provide access to and from the mainland.

A few people have waited until the last minute before leaving, hoping for a final dramatic view of the ragged and rising sea before communications are cut off.

The waves coming in are wild and thunderous, powerful reminders of the force of the looming hurricane that spent much of Sunday and Monday parked over the Bahamas with devastating effect.

Mist blotted out the horizon, rain whipped through the area intermittently, and wind-blown sand swirled, danced and pelted the rare onlookers.

At least one of them loved the scene.

"It's beautiful," said Jed Guty, a Colombian national who refused to give his age except to say he is "very old."

"I don't know if it's coming or not coming, but I'm enjoying it," he said. "I've been through many (storms) but I have never come to the beach."

"The sand, the wind... it's gorgeous."

Michael James was boarding over the last two windows of his house on Florida’s east coast. The first gusty blasts of wind were announcing Hurricane Dorian’s imminent arrival, and most residents had fled. But James, an old hand at this, knew he had a few hours to go before leaving.

“Guess what?” he said. “A real hurricane is a lot different than what people see on TV — it’s much worse.”

James, who is 63, has not forgotten the two times he was caught in hurricanes while working on oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico in the 1980s.

On television, he told an AFP reporter, “you never get the concept. You never get the speed or anything.”

Monster storm Dorian was downgraded Monday to a still-powerful Category 4 as it lumbers slowly across the Bahamas toward the Florida coast.

Residents there — those who haven’t already evacuated — have been keeping a nervous eye on the news, hoping the storm will make the promised northward turn before rumbling into the mainland.

Residents of Port Saint Lucie, a medium-sized city midway up the state’s Atlantic coast, is expected to have its closest encounter with the massive storm late Tuesday or early Wednesday.

People here know what they must do. Many area businesses are already closed and boarded up, and shelters have begun to fill up as the skies take on a more ominous cast.

Mobile home neighborhoods along the Indian River are now nearly deserted, the fragile vinyl and aluminum structures protected in cursory fashion.

But many long-time Floridians are keeping their humor, saying they know from experience what to expect.

– ‘Enjoy the experience’ –

Any tips for a hurricane first-timer?

A man takes a photo of the sea as Hurricane Dorian approaches in Deerfield Beach  Florida on Septemb...

A man takes a photo of the sea as Hurricane Dorian approaches in Deerfield Beach, Florida on September 2, 2019
Michele Eve Sandberg, AFP

Stacey Ewers, who has spent 35 of her 56 years in Florida, breaks into a smile.

“Just enjoy the experience,” she says, taking a break from boarding up her windows with leftover wood — her supply of plywood long since exhausted.

She admitted being just “a bit nervous,” but added: “The hard part is cleaning up, it’s not the storm. The hard part is after the storm.”

Barrier islands — low-lying, elongated islets of sand — protect much of the state’s Atlantic coast.

Residents of those islands are under mandatory evacuation orders, and police are preparing to close the bridges that provide access to and from the mainland.

A few people have waited until the last minute before leaving, hoping for a final dramatic view of the ragged and rising sea before communications are cut off.

The waves coming in are wild and thunderous, powerful reminders of the force of the looming hurricane that spent much of Sunday and Monday parked over the Bahamas with devastating effect.

Mist blotted out the horizon, rain whipped through the area intermittently, and wind-blown sand swirled, danced and pelted the rare onlookers.

At least one of them loved the scene.

“It’s beautiful,” said Jed Guty, a Colombian national who refused to give his age except to say he is “very old.”

“I don’t know if it’s coming or not coming, but I’m enjoying it,” he said. “I’ve been through many (storms) but I have never come to the beach.”

“The sand, the wind… it’s gorgeous.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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