Hurricane Harbor

A writer and a tropical muse. A funky Lubavitcher who enjoys watching the weather, hurricanes, listening to music while enjoying life with a sense of humor and trying to make sense of it all!

Tuesday, November 02, 2021

Wanda. Yellow Circle Seeds an EPAC Storm. Kind of the Story of the Year in the SW Caribbean

 


The hard to see red symbol is Wanda, mixed into that whole cloud mess on the other side of the ocean. It's also kind of hard to notice the yellow on the edge of a beach abiout to jump into the Eastern Pacific that is at 0% chances in the Atlantic.


But if you move on over to the Eastern Pacific part of the NHC Main Pages you will see our little X is healthier and is being given 30% chances of development in there. Actually another yellow circle pops up there on the 5 day as seen below.



This has really been the story of the year on many levels and will be researched by many to see why the East Pacific received so many of the low, westbound waves that normally potentially dangerous SW Caribbean  storms that gave them a longer season than normal. And, when I say that I mean normally as the Atlantic goes into high gear the East Pac slows down, there's a normal ebb and flow of energy and yet this year the seedlings for the dangerous SW Caribbean Storms all slid across the isthmus into the Pacific. 


In general the 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season was either STORMY WILD or soooo slow. It had a sputtering sort of nature where everything formed in groups and you can see that by the graphic above. June and early July were busy, whereas later in July and August it was not. Late August and September were busy, though many were "shorties" that barely lasted yet did pump up the number of actual storms we had even if most of you cannot remember their name. Since the beginning of August it's been quiet.  Note if you take away all the blue dots and only look at the orange dashes you'll see we really didn't have such a busy season. It's really a matter of prespective. Quality over quantity and in this case we lucked out as Larry and his friend Sam both stayed out in the Atlantic putting on a colorful show on the satelitte imagery but not thrashing our beaches or drowning out cities so for that we are grateful.  It reminds me a lot of how morse code works, dot, dot, dot, dash, dot, dot ...well you get that if you ever learned Morse Code which I did but I do not really remember; a cute neighbor boy was involved who wanted to ran cables from our houses to each other so we could "talk" when we were young. (He was probably a boy scout now that I think about it)

I digress... because there really isn't much to talk about. If I go to Windy.com I'm prone to watch the images for cold weather and who is going to get some snow.


Why does the blue (really cold air)
stop at the Mason Dixie?
Kentucky gets it but not Tennessee?
Just odd things always amaze me on graphics like this.

But winter is coming.
Tropical storms are not.

So have a great day.
Malls have Christmas decorations up...
.... no real crowds where I live.
But the msuic is nice.

TJ Maxx is a winter wonderful.
Pink Flamingoes are in storage.

It's the sign of the times!!

Not proofing........
....I have a headache.
Wish I was in Key West this morning!
Sweet Tropical Dreams,
Besos BobbiStorm

@bobbistorm on Twitter and Instagram

Ps... Where are you spending the holidays? 
Thanksgiving blends into Chanukah (early) this year.
Christmas... flows into New Years Eve.
I know... we haven't even eaten turkey yet for Thanksgiving.
2021 has been on Zoom Zoom time.......so do you have a clue?

Christmas Island - Jimmy Buffett.wmv By the way the locals used to call the small island to the West of Key West, but they developed it and renamed it Sunset Island. But it's really a place...........there's also another one, we have lots of names locals use for things down on the rock. 














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Tuesday, August 07, 2018

#NationalLighthouseDay My Favorite Lighthouses. Cape Florida. Bodie Island Lighthouse and Portland Light Subtropical Storm Debby Update



People love lighthouses.
They schedule summer vacations around them.
They decorate their home with posters.
There are maps just for lighthouses.


5 PM Update on Subtropical Storm Debby . . .



If you were here for an update on Subtropical Storm Debby please use the link below for that update, but know not much is expected to happen with Debby. Personally I think Avila took one for the team and upgraded Debby so that we could move on to Ernesto. I'm kidding. Kind of... It's okay our models today are so much better than they were in 2000 when the NHC made an even bigger debacle than anything the Miami Dolphins did when they thought Debby was going to do South Florida. A State of Emergency was declared and the media flooded into Miami to cover the big blow;  people panicked but luckily Debby died down in the Caribbean the way I believe Bastardi said it would never making it past Hispaniola.  Luckily for South Florida the models were wrong. This Debby won't be visiting South Florida or Texas anytime soon. I can't say the same for Ernesto or other hurricanes later in the season.

An old map showing landfall at Miami...


What really happened....




http://hurricaneharbor.blogspot.com/2018/08/subtropical-storm-debby-forms-in.html

Today is National Lighthouse Day according to Twitter and you know how that goes - if you see it on Twitter it must be true. So since there isn't much going on in the tropical Atlantic besides Subtropical Storm Debby I thought I would muse a bit on lighthouses. The coastline where hurricanes make landfall often are littered or should I say decorated with lighthouses. Years ago before we had WhatsApp and Drudge and Twitter and Snapchat and Facebook mariners at sea often did not know what the weather would be like in several days let alone a week out. There were no hurricane cones on your phones and only a skilled sailor would know when an ill wind was blowing somewhere near by. As they tried to guide their ships and crew to safety they relied on lighthouses that were set up along the coastline to guide them to safety and keep them away from the rocks.

Note one man's salvation can sometimes be one man's ruin as the erection of lighthouses in the Florida Keys basically brought the period of the Wreckers there to an end. You can read about it in the link below. Some "Wreckers" called a wreck when they saw it and then owned the cargo that washed up onto the beach. But some unscrupulous types would wander along the rocks at night moving lights about trying to lure ships onto the rocks so they could salvage the cargo. Permanent lighthouses helped the ships navigate the dangerous waters in the Florida Keys where reefs waited just below the water line like rocky icebergs waiting to bring down a schooner laden with valuables. One famous story in Key West tells of a preacher who from the pulpit saw a wreck floundering on the rocks and while giving his sermon he moved slowly down off the pulpit and through the aisle where people sat listening to his sermon and when he got to the back of the room he screamed out "Ship Ahoy" (or whatever they said) and ran out to the floundering ship to save the cargo as well as their souls I suppose and making a nice profit in this world as well as the world to come. Whoever saw the wreck first.. lay claim to whatever the treasure was on board. Really... every old timer in Key West knows that story so it must be true!





Warning this trip down memory lane is most likely brought to you by a mercury retrograde. Ever have a song you haven't heard in years nag at you until you really need to stop and listen to the whole song? While cleaning the house today I suddenly needed to listen to a few old Jewel songs that were popular in the late 1990s or early 2000s. Retrogrades aside from messing up your computer or car often are connected with having old friends pop up out of the blue and land on your doorstep. Normally during summertime mercury retrogrades I hide in my tropical world writing about westbound tropical waves and developing tropical storms but these last few days it's been the Pacific, Pacific and Pacific nonstop and to be honest the Pacific is no longer my ocean. It was once upon the time long ago back in the late 70s and early 80s when I lived in LA and waited for earthquakes to rock my world or a hoping a lost, off course EPAC hurricane would move closer to the coast and whip up the surf at the cold, rocky beaches on the West Coast. And, to be honest I kind of love those gray days especially at Santa Monica Pier when you can't see all the way up into the mountains and the sea mist, fog and early morning and late night low clouds move in and obscure everything from view but the feel of the cool air and the water and I knew I was far away from where I grew up under the hot scorching sun on the tropical beaches of Miami Beach where palm trees didn't offer much shade to protect us as we lay about in our bikinis posing pretty for the guys who took us to the beach for the day so they could watch us in our bikinis.

Today's post should be titled "Confessions from a meteorological mind remembering the beaches of her life" but we will just stick with the Hashtag above.  Warning no grammar here today and commas are not going to be used today. I used them in college to graduate with honors in English and International Relations... I no longer need to use them unless I want to and I don't want to today. Also note that lack of tropical action in the Atlantic tends to make me a bit crazy and I am prone to writing a random post here and there as I am today.

Today being National Lighthouse Day or something silly like that provides a chance for dieters to salvage what's left of their diet after trying to eat #icecream #pizza and #hotdogs so they could post on Snapchat, Instagram and Twitter. Who posts on Facebook anymore I wonder? I'm not complaining I can really use a break from endless pictures of hot dogs, pizza and ice cream today. So I'll add my 3 favorite lighthouses with a special mention to one my great, grandmother probably loved.

It's 1971 and me and my boyfriend are skipping school because it's Senior Day but I'm a Junior worrying if anyone's gonna notice I'm missing from school. Everyone will notice including the psychology teacher who sends me roses who definitely noticed and knew where I was and who I was with but that's what youth is all about. No it wasn't a #metoo thing and no he wasn't stalking me (it was before the internet) he just had a crush I suppose. Happens. But I digress. So yeah.... Cape Florida Lighthouse was the backdrop for that year when I had wonderful moments with said boyfriend as well as horrible fights with him like the August day when everyone screamed at me to get in the car during a torrid tropical rainstorm with lightning coming down all around us while we fought over whatever we fought over and I eventually got in someone's car and drove away.  There was a lot of crying, it probably looked like a scene out of the Batchelorette. You'd think they could throw in some crazy thunderstorm to one of those sad, sappy, sobby scenes on that show. Anyway the drive back over the causeway with lightning on both sides of the bridge and everyone in the car giving me their opinion was probably more dangerous than standing under the pine trees fighting. Fun to be young huh?

 Years later I went for a picnic with my ex-husband and my soon to be in laws and actually walked all the way up the lighthouse with them and looked out over my beautiful Biscayne Bay and Ocean. Cape Florida Lighthouse is a part of the life and times of many a Miami kid. Many years later finally back home in Miami after several years living in LA I went with my younger brother to look at what was left of Cape Florida State Park after Hurricane Andrew tramped across it on it's way to Homestead. The beautiful canopy of Australian Pine Trees were on their sides and from the entrance to the park you could see the lighthouse. You never could see the lighthouse like that before Andrew and it seemed starkly naked as if the park had been raped, ravaged and destroyed. A hungry looking raccoon climbed into a garbage dumpster filled with debris looking for a snack or lunch or whatever it was looking for it could salvage. My brother and I just stared at the lighthouse and the devastation Andrew wrought and I tried not feeling bad for mourning the loss of the beautiful trees when people lost their lives and homes and yet trees are compared to people in many biblical books so I decided not to feel bad and it was what it was and it was never the same again. The officials that hate those beautiful graceful pine trees replaced them with "native" bushes and painted the lighthouse white like it had been once upon the time when Ralph Munroe picnicked there in the late 1800s with someone on the beautiful beach because that's what people always did and always will do on beaches with lighthouses.


See it was brown.
Now it's white.
The way it looked back when...


No that's not me but you get the idea.
Miami kids have quite the life in paradise.

In the early 2000s my best friend moved to Maine because she spent her summers there as a child at Wells Beach  near where President Bush used to vacation. Anyway... she sold her house in Miami and moved to Maine for a few years to be near where she loved after her mother died during a period of transition.  She drove over to the library where I worked to say goodbye and while leaving she placed 3 one hundred dollar bills in an envelope, handed it to me and sh  said "this is for you to have money to come visit me... so don't use it and save it and you better come visit!" and I did. Friendships are built on trust and knowing you can guilt your friends into doing things. Seriously, she knew I wasn't the type to take time off work, leave the kids and use money on myself to take a vacation so she took control of that decision knowing I would now have to come visit her in Maine.  I went in the middle of January to visit so I'd see what it was like in Winter if I really wanted to move up there with my younger kids to join her as we had talked about often. My boyfriend at the time gave me his very warm long winter coat he bought online from that company that promises you that you will stay warm even in a blizzard and I was indeed warm even when we went to see the lighthouse on a day when it was all of two degrees.  The Portland Light  was partially covered in snow, the wind blew strong and the water a color of bright steel blue that I can't describe but is engraved into my mind. We had a blast. We took lots of pictures that I won't post online but I'm standing there with a silly grin with this huge gray coat and my hair wind blown posing in front of Portland Light. It really is beautiful. Portland light is more beautiful in person than it looks on the puzzles that kids put together when they are little. The wind feels so fresh standing there looking down at the rocks below as the water rushes around in little eddies swirling looking beautiful but dangerous. Then we went sledding at a park near where Thoreau wrote poems and we played on the swings in the snow as if we were seven years old.


It looked a lot like this picture above...

Fast forward to 2007.  I went to the Outer Banks with a different boyfriend who I ended up marrying and my youngest son so he could show me the beauty of North Carolina. It was a holiday weekend so there were lots of people and it was crowded and it didn't look much like the movies where some hero stands waiting for the heroine on an empty beach next to some weathered cottage. It was a nice enough trip though not the nicest trip I've had there as I prefer beaches obviously on gray windy days when most people stay home or go to the movies. But then he insisted we go over to the lighthouse as it was nearby. Silly me I thought since we were on the Outer Banks he meant the "striped one" that my younger brother likes but no the Bodie Island Lighthouse on the Outer Banks had black and white horizontal stripes and this definitely was not "the lighthouse" you always see pictures of named after the island. But it was a beautiful because it was quiet, the tourists were probably at the other lighthouse and it's built a bit away from the water surrounded with grassy land and that day the grasses danced from the wind and it was raining lightly and I stared trying to imagine what it looked like back when during another time. Simply beautiful.  You really need to see it if you are ever in North Carolina. Note I'm still in Carolina...though often in Miami but always near the water and a lighthouse is never that far away. 





As for the special mention..... that goes to the Key West Light House on Whitehead Street down the block from where my great great grandparents lived in the 1880s. It stands regal over the island with a great view that looks out forever into the blue waters that surround Key West. It's picture perfect with banyan trees at it's base, royal red poinciana blooms blossoming in the spring and palm fronds always swaying in the tropical breeze. I went with my younger brother a few years ago who I seem to travel with often and we wandered around. I bought a journal in the gift shop, we thought on climbing the lighthouse but he didn't want to because we could see the same view from the top of La Concha Hotel in those days before they turned the rooftop bar into a stupid spa. 


The Key West Lighthouse is across the street from the Ernest Hemingway Museum. What is it about writers and lighthouses? Did he peer out his window across the street and wonder what it was like years before during the days of the Wreckers to live on Whitehead Street? Maybe... maybe not. Knowing him he probably wished he was around back then to go fight in Cuba during the Spanish American War. You know the war that began with  'Remember the Maine" and all those slogans back when fake news was popular at the turn of the century when the most powerful man in America was not the President but a newspaper publisher.  In America History class they taught us it was called "Yellow Journalism" not Fake News. Old Ernest always in search of a war to fight in lived at the wrong time in history. Can you imagine him today posting pictures of himself looking tough and masculine on Snapchat and Instagram? His Facebook Page would be filled with pictures of himself in Cuba looking rugged and authentic. Okay I'll admit it I'm a Fitzgerald Faulkner fan but I did take a Masters Class in the those great American Novelists so let's leave it at I know a lot about Hemingway. He went to Key West. He wrote. He swam. He dreamed of Cuba. He envied Scott. History will judge them both but The Great Gatsby is considered the Great American Novel not For Whom the Bell Tolls. We study them both in high school unless of course said kids skip school on Senior Skip Day.


Above is a picture of Whitehead Street in Key West in the 1880s and the boys playing in the street, or at least two of them, are my great, great uncles Jake and Morris. The photographer told their parents that pictures look better with a focal point, a person in them to see the perspective and size of the buildings so he let them tag along and be in the photographs. Below is a picture of Whitehead Street today outside my family's home they no longer own but we go down often and stand there taking pictures and feeling the breeze under the poinciana trees.


Keep traveling down Whitehead Street.


Still beautiful.


Gotta love Key West.
Gotta love Lighthouses.

So what did my brother and I do instead of climbing the lighthouse? We walked around random streets and found a hidden park and I sat on the swings and I played like a child and my brother took a picture for me to send my best friend to make her laugh. And she sent back the message "giggling" and I'm sure she was and that's life. It's one big circle that goes round and round. 


Gotta love swing sets :)
But EVERYONE loves lighthouses.
An article below on recovery after Hurricane Ike.
Much was destroyed but the lighthouse was there still.
A landmark. 
Landmarks give us focus.



Hurricanes come and hurricanes go. Trees fall down and we replant them and repair what was broken and life goes on. I know that because Lois snoops and reads things she keeps to herself unless she talks on them in cryptic ways. Good song. So true. Life goes on.... after the storm life goes on and sometimes we are stronger because of all we have been through and yet memories of days spent near lighthouses stay with us forever. They are anchors strong and solid and they were put there to protect us and the ships at sea. And when you have hurricanes that blow up fast off shore or plow slowly through the Atlantic on a course WNW towards the Florida Keys or Cape Hatteras the sailors at sea are glad to see their light guiding them to safety. 

Besos BobbiStorm
@bobbistorm on Twitter


People in Maine are kind of light house crazy. I saw lighthouses on top of shopping centers, used car lots, convenience stores and parked in front of homes both large and small. It's a thing there..





Oh the song I needed to listen to.... 
.... that started this long read writing exercise :)


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Wednesday, September 13, 2017

UPDATED 2 Yellow Circles in Atlantic ... 10 PM Hurricane Jose..IRMA RECOVERY. Jose Looping But Forecast To Go Out To Sea ..Currently. Conditions in Florida Keys. Marathon, Big Pine Key, Key West. Some Keys History. Maps. Sad Images. Destruction. Death Toll a Moving Target

I'll update in the morning.
But it's worth mentioning.
2 new Yellow Circles in Atlantic.
Jose still up in the air.


2nd wave still over Africa.


Satellite imagery shows the 2 waves.


NHC watch area.


As for Jose.
Models keep doing weird things.
I'll update in the AM.
Note the Low off the coast..
That Low is the remnant of Jose.
Hmnnn



Tonight the NHC finally introduced the two yellow areas we have been waiting for them to introduce. Both low chances for now (I said yellow) and they are far away off of Africa. Yes, more Cabo Verde Waves. It is September still you know...   There has been much debate in the meteorological community as to which wave develops. NHC highlights them both. More tomorrow. Note discussion below, still valid from earlier today.



Jose at 5 PM
Then please read on after that.
Much on FL Keys
And Irma Recovery.
Currently more like Rescue...

Cone below.


I drew the purple lines on...
What will the cone be in 3 days.
Or in 5 days.
Jose is forecast to loop much.


Spaghetti Models show why.
Seems as if Jose loops often.
Looks like scribble scrabble.
Easy to laugh that off...

But the longer it loops...
...and doesn't go out to sea.
The more there is a possible it won't.
Odds are it does.
But it may miss it's ticket out of town.

So where will Jose be in 5 days.
IF he is being pushed towards the coast.
Close to NJ... 
Or North of Bermuda.
Makes a big difference.


Not much I can now other than keep watching.

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I'll update tomorrow.

Problem is some models...
..show a weak Jose making landfall.
Most take it out to sea.


And some models develop Lee.
More on that tomorrow.

The deaths in the nursing home..
..in Hollywood are now up to 8.
They had been cited for problems.
Generator problems.
Sad...



Big Pine Key hit much worse than the KW.


Read about Jose.
Scroll down to bottom 
(or read...)
For info on specific Keys.

Brief update on Hurricane Jose.
Last man standing sort of....


Official cone from NHC


Currently it IS forecast to go OTS
Out to sea...
So why are people worried?
The problem is it is a looper.
Some models show it looping more.

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And with each loop...
People on the East Coast worry.

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Jose hangs in there too..

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History has seen some odd loopers.
Ginger took the long road to NC VA


So we watch and wait.
But for now Jose is not a problem.
It could get close... 
..things could change.
I'll update regularly.

Moving on to Irma Recovery

Feel free at any time to scroll down to the pictures. I'm a writer and I go long and this story is very personal for me, very real and still ongoing as I'm waiting to hear from loved ones who are in Key West or the Keys and my kids are still on the road back to Miami (one made it back last night with light traffic on I95 go figure) and friends in affected areas slammed by Hurricane Irma. Seems the worst traffic is on I75 as most of Miami drove to Atlanta.

You know life comes down to choices and one of the biggest choices we make is where we live. During a hurricane it may be where we evacuate to or whether we stay, but on any given day where we choose to live determines what our life is like on a daily basis. Sometimes people say "well, how am I supposed to move?" and other people can't wrap their head around that logic as they move about as if they are part gypsy. Maybe I'm part gypsy. I'm definitely one quarter Hungarian (way back) so maybe who knows. I was born in Miami, moved to NYC to go to school for a while, came back to Miami moved to California where I lived a long time. Then I moved back to Miami and ended up in Carolinas; perhaps there is something to numerology as both California and Carolina have a lot of letters in common.

My great, great grandparents began by leaving somewhere in Russia and moved to England where the family lived for a while and did well. They did so well they moved to Key West in it's early days when it was very much like a frontier town and set up store on Whitehead Street not far from the Hemingway House. As the story goes my great grandmother was ill often and loved the water and her husband told her he was taking her somewhere that was warm all the time and surrounded by water. And that is the reason almost everyone moves to the Florida Keys or Key West. Once upon the time they visited... either by motorcycle or car or boat and they looked around and said "it is good" and they stayed. One guy I know at Bnai Zion well . . . rode into Key West on a motorcycles with his sister years back, one Harley broke and by the time they got it fixed he decided he wasn't leaving. Nuff said...

And when you decide to live on a rock in the middle of the ocean or in this case the Florida Straits you realize you could be cut off from the world should the highway go out. In my families case there was no highway, no train and cars did not even exist. People rode horses around Key West and you came and went by boat and it seemed normal. The lack of water was not normal; people used cisterns in their backyard and people got malaria often. At some point my family moved up to Tampa after the turn of the previous century and continued going back and forth for business reasons to Key West.  This ebb and flow of travel and movement existed for years between Tampa and Key West and after Miami became a viable town (much further down the road) it became added into the mix as some siblings moved up to Miami to do business and live on the Main Land and others stayed and continued to live there. So that's a bit of my back story so you understand how I feel about Key West and why this is so personal to me specifically.

As this is my blog, I began it as a venue to give my own thoughts rather than just on Message Boards, it seems only logical I tell the story from my perspective with my own specific knowledge of the Florida Keys and Florida. I've lectured extensively around Florida on Florida History as well as Hurricane History and I have lectured around the US on hurricanes. I don't toot my horn very much. I didn't start this blog to become rich and famous obviously. I started it to educate. I'm beginning to sound like Hemingway now with short sentences. I digress but understand Hemingway and other artists moved to Key West because the place itself is a muse for many artists. If you weren't an artist before you move there ... warning you that you may become an artist of some kind afterwards. The sheer beauty of the island does that to you. The shear beauty of the Florida Keys as a whole even out does Miami which I love and am proud to be a Miamian living in Carolina.

Why do I live in Raleigh? Good question. I remarried a while back after going back and forth often while dating and my husband's business is here and he has lived here going on 30 years if not longer. He's worked hard and continues to do so to help this community thrive be it constantly talking with the local Kroger to bring in more Kosher Food and Chevra Kadisha (Google it) so we are here as are his clients who live around the country but mostly here. He was President of the Chabad Shul here for a long time and is very involved in the community doing things others wouldn't easily do and I was told by many of his friends he can't leave they need him. Sweet...I realized early on he doesn't have friends he has fans as he's an incredible chef in his part time. But it's a small community and at some time down the line we may move but where I'm not sure. It's been a moving target and I'm here and don't expect to leave any time soon. Carolina fit into my overall world plan for where I wanted to live before I met him as it's Southern, it's got beaches, it's got hurricanes, it's got a football team and a Chabad House. And he's very easy about me going back and forth to Miami often on a regular basis for long trips so I pretty much live in both cities still. Is that call Bi-City? I'm not sure but I didn't go to Miami for this hurricane (I thought on it) but I stayed here as I can write and lack of power hampers my ability to update the blog for people who read it for information. And, if the kids needed to evacuate we'd be here and that did happen. Life is made of choices. I do like chasing hurricanes but Major Hurricanes are beyond my pay grade :) so ... I'd rather write from here and help educate and inform. That is why I made this blog and for no other reason.. okay I like to write and a few of my special friends like reading my thoughts on life and hurricanes so that's how the blog began and that's who I am...

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Back to the main story.


The Florida Keys are currently cut off from the rest of the world and in many ways life there today is much like it was for Old Wolfe who came and went by boat and didn't have running water. The Upper Keys are obviously way better off than the Middle and Lower Keys. The "Florida Keys" are broken into three distinct regions; even the NWS out of Key West puts out three separate forecasts. The bridges into Key Largo are good and the damage though bad is much lighter than the Middle and Lower Keys. You see how South Florida is intrinsically connected to the Florida Keys and many go back and forth on the weekend to fish, to eat, to swim to dive. And many people do a reverse commute as they live in South Dade and commute to jobs in the Upper Keys. On any given weekend (or night) my kids drive down to Gilbert's and have dinner and watching the sunset and then drive back up to Miami. It's how we live... it's part of our lives even we live in Miami Dade County.

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The Upper Keys ...

Key Largo is a fairly large key, it's economy very tied into Miami Dade County and tourism obviously. It's got the Publix and a large nice Kmart and many restaurants, motels and condos where people from Miami spend part of their time as well as people who are snowbirds and fly in during the winter. It's got schools, it's a real community centered place. High end fancy homes and marinas and small houses a block in from the water. It's not just about bars and restaurants on the water, but they are nice and great places to watch the sunset. Once the area opens it will be easier to fix up and either way it's still a great place to watch the sunset.  I've head the Atlantic side of worse than the Gulf Side, very murky, muddy debris near the homes on the Atlantic side that will need repairs obviously. Way better than the Lower Keys but way worse than how Miami and Ft. Lauderdale faired. Storm surge (lower but there) and mud and trees down and some minor structural damage. Boats and docks bad and to some that may seem like nothing but it's part of life and part of the economy down there. So easy in Wisconsin to laugh that off but no laughing matter if you live there. As they say it's minor surgery if it happens to someone else, major surgery if happening to you. 

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Middle Keys.
Showing this map...
..as Marathon is the Crown of the Middle Keys.

Big schools.
Another Kmart.
Groceries.
Larger island.
Snorkeling. Fishing.
Many people live there....
...homes of all sizes.
Sombrero Beach awesome.
Warm island community.

Marathon has a lot of damage. I'd say it couldn't look worse, but I've seen close up pictures of the Lower Keys and trust me it's worse in the Lower Keys. But Marathon, especially on the oceanside, got slammed by such a large storm surge it picked up coral rocks from the bottom of the water and dropped them onto land along with whatever boats and numerous lobster traps there were in the water. In fact heard it said that the electric lines are literally wrapped around the lobster traps and tree debris and parts of people's washers and dryers that flew out of houses onto the highway that needed to be cleared away before home owners could come back. Not good. Just really not good. Some structures there but it was from what I've seen worse damage if possible than Hurricane Donna. I'll leave that to be determined by those who do that professionally at the NHC.  Again homes by the water fare worse than inland and saying inland is only relative to someone like me who lived on an Island. You get the idea. Homes built to the newer codes stood, with some damage, but not all homes there were built to code and time will tell. I love Marathon. May sound silly but it's my favorite Kmart in the whole country, not that I shop there so much in Raleigh but it's a stop along the way used often next to the large Dive Center. And, some of my best memories ever are from days spent at Sombrero Beach. Check it out in a year or so..



Sombrero Beach.

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See how Keys change orientation below.
From Middle to Lower Keys


Lower Keys.


BPK largest... to the right.


Now I want to explain the orientation of the Florida Keys change when you get to Big Pine. They run North to South as they cross the Overseas Highway. It's not important why but what is important to know is Big Pine is the big one. Big Pine Key or as we refer to it BPK has many homes of all types demographically and people live there all year. It's a warm wonderful community, many stayed in some of the 2 story homes built to withstand a strong hurricane and I have to tell you those homes did withstand Irma. I'm sure there is some damage but they stand still. Others were washed away and all that is left is where the home once stood visible in drone imagery.


Truly Islands in the Stream.
Mostly mangroves.
Some hardwood on Big PINE Key.

Up close.


See how large BPK is.
..way bigger in size than Key West.

One picture of damage in BPK


Understand... my friend lives here.
Her house is standing...
..tho up close probably damaged.

Again you see the difference between the big well built homes and the small beautifulcottages. The big new ones held up pretty well, though staying in them as some did was probably a long living hell. I heard a reporter say on TV he thought it was tornado damage. There could have been tornadoes but I doubt it as the new large, concrete homes show little damage. If he isn't familiar with the BPK he wouldn't understand. A tornado would damage the larger ones too.. Some of the water ways are completely covered with debris. Sobering but not surprising. Not the first time and everyone living there knows it could happen one day... some day... when no one is ever sure. You enjoy the beauty while you got it and you know one day you may have one hell of a clean up job or rebuilding job and I've heard some that stayed say they would never stay again for a hurricane. 



Close up picture of BPK


I cut this picture down small.
Note big concrete bldg little damae.
Debris nearby is cottages. 

If this was tornado damage in theory the larger structures would be more damaged.  We try to explain storm surge and it's hard for many to understand. Again I said earlier it picked up coral rocks from the reef and deposited them on land ..   And as for the winds, Irma moved slowly if you remember so those homes on the Keys were under Major Hurricane winds for hours... and hurricane force winds nonstop for 24 hours as it crossed slowly. So that is what a HURRICANE does and don't kid yourself this is not because they are an island but up and down the coast from Florida to Carolinas and along the GOM coast if you have a home a block or two from the water this could be you.

Going back to what I said earlier. You choose where you live and 99.9% of the time it IS paradise and will be again. It's a risk you take when you build there and you rebuilt, or move again another decision. Conchs either by birth or who take on to live there are resilient, stoic and practical they are not stupid. They have a real sense of family, community and a deep love of Key West as well as the Keys in general. They are called Conchs for two reasons. One obviously the conch shell but earlier English people moved there and farmed, worked and lived. Some were wreckers capturing cargo that washed up on shore after their ships went down on the reefs. I'm a Conch in that my mother's family was there since the 1800s but usually I just say I'm Southern Jewish. When they got to Key West they had a Sefer Torah with them and helped set up a Synagogue that often met in their house or another house nearby if they were up in Philly visiting relatives. Key West from the beginning was a diverse community of Bahamians, Cubans and Immigrant Jews who ran away from persecution in European communities. Many people from the Carolinas and Georgia and the rest of Florida moved down. It's always been One Human Family. And the Islands to the North of the Key West known as the "Lower Keys" are basically the suburbs in ways to Key West. Kids attend Key West High School and many who work in the High School live down in Big Pine, Big Coppit and Cudjoe Key that I wrote about previously. 

I'll update later and do a long proof of this blog over the next hour. It's been hard to write this as my kids are on Whastapp with various issues and people keep asking me "what do they need in Key West" and the truth is I don't know. They need EVERYTHING... they need water and diapers and medicine and food and it's going to be a long recovery. Worried some on the Zucker family who I know well at Chabad of Key West and I have many friends at Bnai Zion the Temple in Old Town that my family helped start years back.  I have lived days of my life in Key West... there are places that were home, a safe haven to breathe, revive and live. I've spent many a Jewish Holiday with Tom sitting in the kitchen within site of the pool eating Edwards Cheese Cake for Shavous and much, much time with one of my close friend Stuart who passed away a few years back. As someone once said to me down there.. Mi Casa Es Su Casa and it was... and I'm sure he's worried on friends there as well. 

We love the water and the flowers and the trees and flowers will grow back.  But it will be slow going. My son-in-law is in Marathon delivering things to the fire station there. Everything was moved there logically from other places but Irma didn't go West enough to keep Marathon in tact. From gloves to water to whatever they are delivering things with FEMA and soon he will only be on a satellite phone. What do they need he asks... and I can't say specifically. Anything they bring will help. They are cut off for now. No power, no phone, no cable and the only way they can call out is to borrow a satellite phone from a reporter to tell people they are alive. That simple.


Pictures I took from Bnai Zion at their 120th anniversary several years back Chanukah time.. They make an awesome Shabbos lunch for everyone who is there on Saturday for services. The Rabbi and his wife are awesome and people from doctors, lawyers, jugglers from Mallory Square to a Conch Train driver to a chef at Camilles  Restaurant attend services. The original synagogue is now Sarabeth's Restaurant  and the owners belong to Bnai Zion and are active.  Chabad is filled with locals and many of the Israelis that work and own businesses on Duval Street. Next time you are there you will notice a small mezuzah on the door frame on those Tee Shirts shops... now you know why. Google Mezuzah Chabad.

So.....it's very personal for me. And the Hollywood Nursing Home story is also personal as my Father in Law before he died this year stayed there after he was released from Hollywood Memorial. I know it well.

I'll go back to the Florida Keys and Key West and stand there and stare up at my Great Grandfather's house and smile. 

This a blog I don't maintain enough.
It's mostly for family info.
I write.
It's what I do.
How I do genealogy.


That's an ancestor.
Frontier town.
Key West 1800s
KW recently.

The house is there. Currently it was for sale again. If I had the money I'd buy it in an instant. Guessing property in KW a lot cheaper now than last week. No words. I'll find some next blog post tomorrow. 



Besos BobbiStorm
@bobbistorm on Twitter.

www.redcross.org



Some stories that are trending you may or may not have heard about.

https://weather.com/storms/hurricane/news/hollywood-florida-retirement-home-dead-irma

Again it's personal, my father-in-law who passed away a few months back was in that facility after being in the hospital nearby not well enough to go home and close to going into hospice before he simply died after saying goodbye to his children, grandchildren and having his favorite foods. He was in the catering business... he knew what he liked to eat and made sure to have some while saying good bye to loved ones. It's a nice place all in all, however a hurricane can stress life in all ways and they are now investigating to see if there are higher losses of life in other nursing homes in South Florida as well as I type this blog. It's an evolving story.


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