I specifically asked what is your discounted rate for hurricane evacuees . The CM said there are no more rooms available at any resort.I wonder if they’re really actually all full or if they’re cutting off online and phone booking so that in person evacuees can get rooms when they arrive. People Magazine just posted a story about how a lot of people on the coasts tend to go toward the resort if they have to leave and what Disney’s hurricane accommodations are like.
Universal's done the same antics before. Hurricane Ian, albeit was about a day and a half later, but they reopened with 2 rides in each park.
I was wondering the same thing. I can see both scenarios being true.I wonder if they’re really actually all full or if they’re cutting off online and phone booking so that in person evacuees can get rooms when they arrive. People Magazine just posted a story about how a lot of people on the coasts tend to go toward the resort if they have to leave and what Disney’s hurricane accommodations are like.
Main Street at MK is like flowing river in a rainstorm / it might be the Rivers of America flowing into the streets and buildings if this weather prediction hold true.Approximately 1 foot of rain is expected to fall over central Florida in 24 hours. 1 foot, with hurricane force winds, locally even heavier rain, lightning, thunder and the occasional tornado.
That amount of rain, on already saturated soil plus the winds means a breathtaking amount of trees being uprooted and just falling over which will trigger vast amounts of power outages.Approximately 1 foot of rain is expected to fall over central Florida in 24 hours. 1 foot, with hurricane force winds, locally even heavier rain, lightning, thunder and the occasional tornado.
Yes. The rainfall here has been wild.That amount of rain, on already saturated soil plus the winds means a breathtaking amount of trees being uprooted and just falling over which will trigger vast amounts of power outages.
All I know is Mother Nature is unpredictable, and I'd say hope for the best, but prepare for the worst case scenario.
@WaltsTreasureChest why the angry react?
The lower the millibars the more intense the storm?
As someone who experienced Charley back in 2004 here in Orlando, the best advice is to stop obsessing over every minute adjustment in each update and continue to prepare for the worst. Charley was supposed to only barely graze Orlando until late in the morning when it took a sudden turn toward Punta Gorda and headed straight for Orlando. The eye came right over my house. The tree and roof damage from that storm was hard to describe. For well over a year, when you flew into the airport nearly half the houses in the area had blue tarps on them because of the amount of roof damage and the limited supply shingles.View attachment 819799
This grouped several counties together, but note that the highest of those winds are for Osceola and Polk. Orange and Seminole are forecast to have milder winds based off current projections.
The NHC shifted their track a bit south around 5pm slightly away from Tampa. However, the latest GFS and ICON models were moving northward back into Tampa again. So there's no telling what it will actually end up doing in the end.
Agreed, it wasn’t meant as an angry reaction towards @DryerLintFan personally but a frustration over what’s about to comeI just assume it's because it is frustrating knowing we have such little control over what happens when it comes to nature. Apart from preparing the best one can in situations like this.
It's scary, frustrating, aggravating. But it's also the truth.
No one really knows what the true outcome of this will be, until this storm has passed through.
Be smart, listen to authorities, prepare, and stay safe everyone.
As someone who experienced Charley back in 2004 here in Orlando, the best advice is to stop obsessing over every minute adjustment in each update and continue to prepare for the worst. Charley was supposed to only barely graze Orlando until late in the morning when it took a sudden turn toward Punta Gorda and headed straight for Orlando. The eye came right over my house. The tree and roof damage from that storm was hard to describe. For well over a year, when you flew into the airport nearly half the houses in the area had blue tarps on them because of the amount of roof damage and the limited supply shingles.
It will keep changing and one change might look better and then the next one might look worse. It's best to just stay on plan and prepare for the worst and if you don't end up needing it then you have no worries.
Does this make it stronger? Weaker? Move it south?
You said for those not in the Know and Then continued to speak Greek
As someone who experienced Charley back in 2004 here in Orlando, the best advice is to stop obsessing over every minute adjustment in each update and continue to prepare for the worst. Charley was supposed to only barely graze Orlando until late in the morning when it took a sudden turn toward Punta Gorda and headed straight for Orlando. The eye came right over my house. The tree and roof damage from that storm was hard to describe. For well over a year, when you flew into the airport nearly half the houses in the area had blue tarps on them because of the amount of roof damage and the limited supply shingles.
It will keep changing and one change might look better and then the next one might look worse. It's best to just stay on plan and prepare for the worst and if you don't end up needing it then you have no worries.
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