Hurricane Charley - A Storm Chaser's Nightmare in Florida
Vložit
- čas přidán 30. 11. 2020
- This is the original hurricane Charley DVD from storm chasers Jim Edds, Mark Rackley, Doug Kiesling, Chris Collura, Jason Foster, and Jeff Gammons. Each of us has agreed to participate in bringing you this footage on CZcams. There is a time code on there and if you're interested in purchasing any footage note the time code and if it's not mine (the best shots of course) we'll find who shot it.
- Věda a technologie
I'll never forget this storm. I was a kid when this happened living in Punta Gorda. As soon as we got the update that it turned towards us the power went off. Then the windows began to budge. My mom had us run into the bathroom to hide. The sounds of the wind was terrifying. We had to run to my nana's apartment building in the eye of the storm to seek shelter there. Water was up to our knees. It was truly terrifying but I'm happy we survived. My mom was so strong protecting me and my brother.
About to maybe get another one
Driving through PG 6 months after was extremely shocking. Praying were all safe next week 🙏
@@ryanranard5187 yea but hopefully it’s not as bad god is with us amen 🙏
Just came to ask if this was the one that turned suddenly and last minute
Stay safe!
On high alert for Ian, I remember seeing being sunny outside during the eye of Charley. Never forget.
It never ceases to amaze me how nature's order is pure chaos to us humans. A hurricane is a perfectly crafted vehicle to move tropical/equatorial warmth to higher latitudes.
While I'm not a Floridian... much of my family vacations in Sanibel every 4-5 years. We had planned a trip for what would be the winter after Charley hit AND the winter after Ian hit.
I still have this incredible DVD almost 17 years later! I'll never forget that storm, the damage and going 12 days without power in the middle of Summer. Thanks for keeping the memory of Charley going, people need see it to believe it.
When you look at the tracks of Charlie and Ian, it is amazing that the tracks are almost identical right to the landfalls.
that's a good point. Ian was huge after the eyewall replacement cycle, well it was big before that but bigger after. I think I measured 40 miles across Ian's eye. Charley's was about 5 miles across. Both very destructive storms. Thanks for watching.
That old man walking up to the camera when the wind was going about 150mph and saying "A bit windy today" before walking off had me in tears.
Where was that in the video?
I didn’t see that
Hurricane tourists don't have to stick around for the 2 or 3 weeks after the event when there's no power or water in 95 degree, 90 percent humidity weather. That's when true character is revealed.
Amen to that. I always tell people getting through the hurricane isn't the hard part; it's the aftermath.
This is by far the best video I have ever seen in my 63-years of life. My wife and I did storm chasing until the time of her death. But we never encountered anything to this degree! Very well done gentlemen.
I will never forget the 2004 hurricane season. Just one hurricane after the other. I was in fourth grade when this freakish season happened. So many trips to the shelter. When Charlie was coming through, there was a tornado that touched down right on the roof of the shelter I was in, right in the middle of the night. It was the scariest thing I've heard, just a massive bang, and then strong winds all around the shelter.
I lived in Pinellas County at the time and my whole block was boarded up. My mom lived in Punta Gorda, and at what seemed the last minute Charley button hooked into Charlotte Harbor. I was down there the next morning with all the supplies my neighbors donated to me. It was surreal driving into town. All the landmarks were gone. My step dad boarded up the windows on the new manufactured home at the last minute and that was what saved it. The only real casualty was when I went to hook the TV up to the generator, a tree branch from outside impaled it through the wall. Most of the homes on their block were flipped upside down in the canal. Was down there for weeks helping with cleanup. My mom moved to west TX after that, never wanting to go through that again. I ended up moving to Punta Gorda in 2019 and rode out Ian, with the eye coming directly over. It lasted FOREVER, it seemed like and took quite a bit of damage, but the damage to downtown was nothing compared to Charley. However, the poor folks in Sanibel and Ft. Myers Beach suffered a far worse fate. Praying for some grace as we begin Hurricane Season 2023...
hurricane Ian brought me here...
Me too from Monterey Bay, California
2003-05 was quite a time for Hurricanes.
**********Thanks for watching everyone . . . this video is really taking off. It's a storm chaser classic. Feel free to click on those ads too :). **********
I gotta assume Ian has a cause in CZcamss recommendation pushing it. If you are able to you should chase ian with the same style as this video
@Jim Edds Will you be storm chasing Ian that’s gunning for the gulf side of Florida?
FYI: I remember your frightening experience documenting Haiyan (Yolanda).
Thank you for your dedication.
Thank you ! Will not forget - went straight over us in Orlando !
Awesome video - stay safe & well
Because it’s about to be a repeat
I am thinking Palm trees must be the toughest species of tree. They never seem to uproot. Amazing resilience!
I've watched that video about 5 times by now, and I'm still amaze by it. Charley was a hell of a storm. You guys are Hurricanes Warriors ! Kudos !
This is without a doubt the GREATEST video I've ever seen on Hurricane Charley or on any hurricane, for that matter!! 🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆I was living in Sebring when Charley struck. Your video brought it all back - WOW❗❗❗❗I also remember the incredible Milky Way we had the following night-into-morning ❤❤❤❤ The condo I lived in was right around the corner from Florida Hospital Heartland, and the neighborhood was on the hospital's generator. As a result, we had our power back on three days after the storm. Everyone else in town had to wait at least a month before getting theirs back. I worked at the time as a mental health counselor in Wachula, and Charley literally reduced the town to rubble and woodchips. MINDBLOWING❗❗❗❗
.
In 1991 me and my gf lived right on the ocean in a small rented house, sliding glass door opened to a deck that butted right against the seawall in Marshfield, Mass.it was the perfect storm movie storm, the meteorologists didn't realize the systems were going to back up to the coast, usually they go out to sea, my gf wanted to go when the waves started to roll up over the seawall but I was excited, it was so beautiful until the waves started to crash over the house and one wave carried a boulder that crashed through sliding glass doors, time to go, but it was too late, streets flooded on both ends so had to back the car up an embankment across the street from the house, stuck but somewhat safe, elevated just enough to stay out of the water, at the height the waves were going completely over the house, washing even over telephone pole wires, blue sparks running up and down the wires, then the house was completely washed out to sea right in front of our eyes, next morning we got out and walked over to a foundation with only one item in the cellar, our king-size mattress, it was obviously waterlogged and must've weighed 3 thousand lbs, lost everything but still alive.🙏
my sister survived this shit and lived to tell the tale with the most wild story.
she had a neighbor, that neighbor left their jet skis outside, and their dog in the house while they evacuated. which is crazy. your leaving because it’s dangerous and your not bringing your dog with you? anyways, hurricane starts, and those jet skis rip through the house with the dog still inside. my sisters mom has to run into that house DURING A HURRICANE and rescue that dog. my sister says they were huddled in a closet with 4 poodles and a random dog. she thought she was going to die.
2004 feels like a very long time ago, so much has changed for the worst in every way.
I know exactly what you mean. I remember growing up in the 80's, early 90's. I don't know what's happening to the world, but i don't like it.
The youth are kinder now.
It's very normal to have a negativity bias as we grow older. But honestly , I feel growing up people were worse than they are today
I lived in Cape Coral Fl when Charlie hit. OMG the damage was unbelievable. Our home was less than 1 year old and built to all new hurricane standards and our only damage was a couple shingles missing, but our next door neighbors house was left unliveable. But you should have seen how our community came together, everyone helped everyone. We had a huge generator and shared our power with 2 other homes, rather than running our AC and using the power just for our house. We didn't have power or water for 4.5 days, luckily we had a big swimming pool (like so many in FL do), so we could bath and flush our toilets. It literally took months to clean up after that storm. Yet you rarely hear anything about hurricane Charlie. I don't think most people realize how huge it was or how many people died.
So we all here before Ian?
here before nicole now
I distinctly remember Charlie. I had just moved to Ft Lauderdale & heard a train coming but hadn't noticed any tracks nearby. I stepped out onto my west-facing balcony & if I hadn't grabbed the railing with both hands, I think I would've been swept off. It was "just" an outer band coming all the way across the peninsula as Charley made landfall. My respect for wind increased considerably over the next six weeks. Each one came closer. I moved out of FL in 2005. Babye Charley, Frances, Ivan & Jeanne.
Who else is here watching this awaiting for hurricane IAN to make landfall SEP 2022.
Lived in Fort Myers during this. I remember afterwards going to my neighbors to check her house and she had an gator in her pool, powerlines down everywhere. Parents even drove me through PG afterwards to see if we could help at all. Mom was 8 months pregnant. Was crazy.
This one reached us in Orlando. Massive winds, huge tree uprooted by this Cat4 landed on next door neighbors house. We were without power for weeks as water surged beyond belief in our home. It was too late to leave as we had no idea I'd be this catastrophic. Trees were down all over the road. We were trapped in our house. It was major. For everyone's safety, heed to warnings of evacuation. Preparedness is vital. Charlie was worse than Ian
Came here during hurricane Ian. I was 3 years old when Charley hit but don't remember too much. Stay safe everyone
That's about as close as you wanna get dude.
You guys were lucky on that one.
Excellent footage as always.
Hope you have many ( safe.) Chases to come. :)
not many chasers will go outside for a strong Cat 4-We did only because we screwed up. There were a number of people killed by flying debris and hurricane Charley.
How tf was that guy able to drive with his front hood up during an evacuation scene with all the cars????? Please tell me I'm not the only one that noticed.
Either out of chance or deliberate design (I believe the latter)... because the shape of a car hood is ovular (front of the car, and where the hood connects before the windshield), it creates a viewport if you lower your head to be parallel with where that fulcrum takes place.
I noticed that too! Probably so his engine wouldn't overheat, but it's a crazy idea.
yeeah i noticed but i dont get it, why? was it blown up or smthn
****Thanks for watching everyone. This video has really taken off lately****
Just in time too… TD9 looks to be a repeat of Charley
Why it got so popular
I was a kid when I went through this storm and man I watch this and feel the same type of knots in my stomach I felt experiencing it.
When I saw the tops of the trees hitting the ground in my back yard from my back porch I knew it was bad and shortly after that I was stuffed in a closet with a mattress on top of me with my brother because of tornado threats! Now I live more north and preparing for tropical storm/hurricane Idalia. Good luck to everyone preparing for the storm.
I went thru Charlie & it was wild!!! Very Very Scary!!!!
So crazy how it was Friday the 13th & it was so dark -No Power & Hot as Hell
I was gonna cool off in my pool but a big tree came in my Lanai and went in my pool & I got sap all over me it was so sticky!!!☹️. Anyway it was the most intense thing I ever went thru & I'm Happy to be alive!!!
I'm Happy your alive too!!!😎
@@999cristywow, that’s crazy!
@@999cristy I never realized it was Friday the 13th! Perfect day for that storm. Having no power for days in that humidity was a test of strength even as a kid! Thank goodness you weren’t crushed by that tree! Im very happy you are alive as well 😀
Here I am getting ready for Ian.
Are you ok?
I was in Orlando and this rode up I4. Amazing all the trees knocked over by us. I was standing outside leaning into the wind and my wife screamed for me to get in. Then 2 more hit us that year. My first Hurricane since I moved to Florida
I remember this one very well it was the first hurricane out of 3 to hit us in a row I believe it was Charlie, Francis and Gene we had no.power for over a month no gas no ice very little food thank God we all made it but that was a rough season to say the least
I lived in Bonita Springs - about 20 miles south of Ft. Myers. 5 miles inland, we saw 90 mph winds hunkered down in our house. Trees down everywhere, knee deep water everywhere, no power for 8 days. I ran 3 inverters off our cars to keep the fridge and 1 fan running, until they ran out of gas. the house was covered in lizards and frogs, snakes all over the deck, gators swimming thru looking for a meal. Having just moved down there from the midwest, that was quite an experience. The worst part was no A/C for me or my pregnant wife and travelling many miles to hunt down water and ice. Every night the neighborhood would pull together and grill dozens of steaks and what ever else needed to be used up for a big dinner. I was an auto mechanic and when I finally went back to work, I spent months going through scores of drowned cars trying to get them running again. After 2 more big storms, we moved back up to Missouri for good. I've been through 5 hurricanes in my life, but that one was the most miserable of all. I remember all the houses in the Port Charlotte/Punta Gorda area that still had blue tarps on their roof a full year later when I moved out.
Mississippi gulf coast during Katrina! We all still live with that fear every freaking year! God bless and protect our friends from Hurricane Ian! Our prayers are with ya'll!
I was there bay St. Louis
We went through Charley, but fortunately we lived in the northeast corner of Charlotte County. We lost a lot of trees, but had no damage to our buildings. We had more like tropical storm winds, and our buildings were all new and built according to recent building codes. Our kids all attended school in Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte. Our oldest son attended Charlotte High in Punta Gorda. His school was severely damaged. Punta Gorda was a total wreck after the hurricane. We were so grateful to be living where we did instead of in Punta Gorda. It was an unreal sight we saw as we drove into Punta Gorda after the storm. We were totally shocked at the damage. My doctor lost his home in Jamaica, his house in Punta Gorda, and his office in Punta Gorda - all from Charley. His office was in a 3 story building just a few blocks from the government building. All the windows were blown out of the building. I never saw him or his office staff again, as they were all displaced by the storm.
Wow! Thanks for posting this, Jim! I had seen small clips of your insane footage, but hadn't seen most of this video. Great job filming as always. What a storm!
For me Charley was in and out in about 35 minutes that's how much tape I used. There was a lot of flying debris and Charlie where I was especially and it was all in my eyes the specs of dirt and junk in the air so I couldn't really see too well. It took three days to get all that stuff out of my eyes. Thanks for watching guys.
@@JimEdds you were on weather channel D:
I've honestly never been so invested in a video on youtube! Its very hard for me to sit thru a 10 min vid, buuuut this video here is a TOP NOTCH like these guys need an award! I live in Tennessee so I don't get to see much so I only see what I see online usually and this made me feel like I was right in the middle of the hurricane thank you men sooooo much for what y'all do its truly amazing and I'll honestly be on the lookout for more videos !! Be safe 😘 😘 ❤💯💯
Thanks for watching Trista . . . get the right storm and 6 crazy chasers in a deserted town, boom, crazy weather video.
@@JimEdds keep it up you guys are professional and deserve ALOT more followers 😍!
Who’s watching now that we have hurricane Ian coming to us ?
Me lol
I’m getting impacted by Ian too .-.
Bro Ian be strong as fuck tho like idk
Me
Ps I am going through it now
Me lol
Watching this I now understand why my relative that lives in Florida just spent thousands and thousands of dollars making his house hurricane resistant, roof, windows, shutters and doors, his house is also concrete.This is so scary.
Yes. Everyone here now prizes metal roofs. Shingles are what you see everywhere. Put them back on only to be blown away again 6 years later. 😂
Palm trees are like, come at me bro.
I had just moved here a month before to Cape Coral which is between Punta Gorda and fort Myers. I did not know what to expect but was use to tornadoes from Georgia. This storm was intense and dangerous. I didn’t realize how bad it was until it was over and we got out to drive around.
Loads of damage.
We were without electricity for 2 weeks and I remember after that piles of appliances everywhere for months from all of the flooding on the beaches. It was horrible!
I remember it flattened punta gorda and quite a lot of places on fort Myers beach. Debris everywhere
Thanks for posting this! Incredible footage!
This was a vicious storm that never seemed to be talked about
Hurricane Charley -
"You wanted wind. You got wind" 😈
I can remeber driving down 75 towards Ft Myers and seeing the hundreds of FEMA trailers in the fields off the highway. AT the interstate interchanges, all those tall light poles were all bent over to the ground. Downtown Punta Gorta was just devastated. That was a really bad storm. After all these years this is the first time Ive seen vids from inside the storm. I dont know what all you could do to protect your house from a storm of that intensity, just throwing everything its blown apart already along with it. You would need a bunker practically. I feel for anyone that rode this one out. Would make you think twice about getting all excited about hurricane parties....lol.
Living in Sebring Fl. at this time in a 1958 Whitley mobile home. Sustained no damage, did not evacuate, power failure at 6:05 pm. Blessings for you and all who came through unscathed.
Anyone else notice the car driving with it's hood completely open at 2:43? I can't help but picture Ace Ventura style driving, head out the window and all.
Amazing footage and brave of you guys to film it. Thank you all 🫡
I remember this hurricane all to well! I remember the tv screen showing radar of all red and it was moments before impact. We lived in Rotonda/Englewood at the time but I worked in Port Charlotte. It was wicked and when it was over, we drove through Punta Gorda and it literally brought tears to my eyes -- everything was flattened. It didn't help that other hurricanes soon followed. That was the longest I ever went without power and being in the florida heat while having a 7mth old, it was brutal! There wasn't much of a storm surge but we were fortunate to not have much damage. Charley brought the winds that day, along with tornados and it was a memorable day for all the wrong reasons. #XCharley2004
My sister and I were in a closet in Port Charlotte. Such a strange feeling, like the house was trying to lift off it's foundation. Things crashing about outside. The house we were in only had minor damage but the next door neighbor lost their roof and back wall.
We were amazingly lucky.
Port Charlotte look like a war zone afterwards.
We were in Port Charlotte when my family and i went through Charley with barely any time to prepare I remember my mom folding laundry as we watched the storm change direction, while my dad found anything to board windows up 30 min later the power was down and me and my sister were put in a van in a garage because all the rooms in our house had windows. The howling of the wind was so so loud! I remember the garage door almost ripping off and the van moving back and forth. We went out and drove around afterwards. I remember looking through the walls of my neighbors house, the whole wall of the bedroom was ripped right off, the bed still had bedsheets on it pictures still hanging on the walls. We drove around in my dad's jeep until we ran into so many trees and powerline/poles down. It was crazy! Our house was barely untouched the pool cage was just collapsed into the pool. We were lucky enough to live towards northern Port Charlotte and expierienced no storm surge! Absolutely insane how you guys got this all on film. Brings back childhood nostalgia that I miss so so much!
Nobody else noticed the guy driving by at 2:43 with his hood popped open 🤣
😂😂😂😂
I came to the comments for this. My only guesses are overheating issues or Ace Ventura is real.
Yes saw that lol he was going out of Florida 😂😂
Man was he driving like that to work back then 🤣
😂😂😂😂😂😂
This dude risked his life for Science and no ones talking about it.
I grew up in Bokeelia, the eye went right over my house as a kid. We were newer to Florida and didn't realize how bad it can get. We watched my neighbors house disintegrate in front of our eyes before all piling in to a walk-in closet. I never got to see much footage of it though, 2004 was a different time. Thanks for sharing this. :)
I spend Hurricane 🌀 Ida in LaPlace, La. in 2022; I was truly amazed at the amount of force that Mother Nature can bring when she's at her worse!!!!!
Ah shit I was in Ponchatoula La place got so tore up
I'll never forget that Saturday night. It was my first hurricane; I was a little over 11 1/2 years old....
I lived in Arcadia when Charley hit, right off of Highway 17, so we were directly in the eyewall. It was absolutely terrifying. The most intense weather event I've ever lived through in my entire life. Arcadia was hit hard by Charley. Our house survived, but we were without power for fourteen days. I hope to never go through anything like that again.
Great documentary and glad you were all safe and ok!
I moved to Cape Coral Florida from Texas in 2022 just two months before Hurricane Ian came here. Hurricane Ian is the first Hurricane I even went through.
Welcome to the Cape! It was your initiation. It’s getting crowded here😂
This guy wrecked my town. We had no power for two weeks. We had three hurricanes come through our county that year. Charley being the first and worst.
We were lucky in Tampa not to have been hit by Charley. Very intense eyewall . Like a large Tornado wrecking havoc along the way.
Went through Charley-Francis (basically the same hurricane. It did a u-turn), Irma, and Ian and patiently waiting for Idalia.
Charley and Irma were my worst.
we didn't even get any rain for this one but charlie hit us pretty hard here they won't let me go out and film like this i've tried they threaten to arrest me for curfew
Same . Went through all those as well. I was around 9/10 when Charley hit and man I still remember it vividly. The worst hurricane I ever been through by far
Incredible video! Wow! Amazing.
34:22 Probably the most iconic footage of Charley.
Charley was so dangerous and I was really scared stuck outside but I got the shot.
The 160mph wind gust at the gas station is what I think of first with this storm but I also remember this shot. This is first time seeing it in hd.
I lived in Kissimmee, FL in 2004, when 3 hurricanes crossed over the city (Charley, Frances, Jeanne). Fortunately we were so far inland that we got strong Cat 2 gusts at best. Still had so many damaged houses, trees everywhere... I never even thought about how bad it was in Punta Gorda during this. Insane.
It was pretty cool to hear Stephen Hawking talking about the storm. More than once. Awesome
I’ve been interested in severe storms sense I was 4 and this video reminds me why I want to become a storm chaser
(Currently a junior in high school)
The definition of Hurricane - Long "term" tornado; total destruction.
It's the best hurricane footage ever.❤🎉
Watching this because hurricane Ian is only 2 days away from the same coastal area again.
Thank you very much for this information!!
Thank you very much Inger. Thanks for watching!
Mb for not knowing this but why is this comment inside of a tinted red box I have never seen this before on a comment
@user-lg9yr5wf3t It's because the commenter donated money so youtube highlights the comment.
@@JimEddsAlejandra Gonzalez Bogota Colombia
A hurricane on Friday the 13th is a recipe for disaster.
It was interesting seeing the difference in damage after Charley and then Ian. I was surprised that my house was still standing after Ian considering the size, length of time it took to move through and the strength, but the actual damage was much less than Charley caused.
I was in Homestead visiting a friend during Hurricane Andrew. That persuaded me to abandon the idea of moving to Florida !
I WAS LEAVING IN WINTER PARK FLORIDA AT THAT TIME. THE HURRICANE DESTROYED THAT AREA. MY DAUGHTER WAS 3 DAYS OLD 😪 MY HUSBAND AND I WERE STUCK ON THE BATHROOM. I WAS IN PAIN BECAUSE I JUST HAD THE BABY. IT WAS SO HOT AND SCARY. IT WAS HORRIBLE. AND THEN WE GOT HIT WITH 2 MORE HURRICANES BACK TO BACK 🤦♀️
That’s terrible! Did y’all lose power? I can’t imagine going thru a hurricane with a new baby
@@jenniferruth812 yes we did for a whole week. We cooked in the grill because I lived in a complex and all the stoves were electric.
I remember hearing about Hurricane Charlie in 2004. Charlie was one angry storm. Then, as the storm weakened it went across FL and brought some wind and rain to the Carolinas. I heard the same areas that were hit by Charlie also received flooding from the back end of Frances and Jeanne. Those two hit the east coast of FL.
Is, was, and always will be my go-to video to get pumped up before intercepting a hurricane. Maybe I'll see you in the field for Idalia Jim. Happy hunting.
I WAS LEAVING IN ORLANDO AT THE TIME WILL NEVER FORGET CHARLEY GOOD JOB GUYS
These guys are all a great bunch of Storm Chasers. When Charley was moving up toward Tampa I grabbed my family and hauled a'' on the way to Lake Wales when Charley made that sudden turn NE into Punta Gorda. I had to turn back toward Tampa afterwards. I knew if Charley made it to Tampa it would definitely turn into a CAT5 Hurricane which I did not want to deal with.
You don't chase a hurricane, it chases you.
Hearing this AOL messenger sounds takes me so far back.
Wow, I remember owning this DVD and going through this in our house. Lived in Fort Ogden (Between Arcadia and Punta Gorda) and absolutely everything was destroyed.
I was 8 years old living in Jacksonville in 2004, I remember being out of power for two weeks a clip from especially this storm and Ivan in back to back months.
Wow! That was crazy. I can’t believe you men were out in that.
I was on vacation with my family In Orlando when I was caught in this hurricane. I must’ve been 11 years old. Can’t remember much of during the storm (as I am 30 years old now) but all I CAN remember was being in the bathtub the whole time because I guess it was supposed to be the “safest place”.
Orlando was the intersection of 3 Hurricanes in 2004. Charley Frances and Jeanne. Even inland one is not out of reach for a hurricane.
I was in Orlando for this storm too! I couldn’t believe how bad it was considering how far inland it is.
I was in Arcadia, directly in the eyewall of Charley. I thought we were all going to die. The most frightening weather event I've ever experienced. When it was all over, I looked at my young son and told him that he could call himself a survivor for the rest of his life. I NEVER want to experience another hurricane. It was utterly terrifying.
This is absolute amazing footage🌀🌀🌀.. The hour+ video length kept me from watching this for weeks but I'm glad i gave it a go
yes indeed, an hour is a bit long but Dougie did the labor intensive edit so it was his call. Looking back, it's a classic that has stood the test of time and I'm glad all the guys agreed to get it up on CZcams.
My brother was there then and during Ian and the rest of the family in Desoto, hardee and Ian in highlands...was insane for both
This system packed winds of 145 mph at landfall hurricane Ian made landfall with 155 mph winds with gusts to 190
Here in Fort Pierce, Florida (South =east= florida coast) the strongest part of a Hurricane that makes landfall here is always the "back" eyewall, so like the 2nd eyewall that comes over after the eye passes which is the right side. It's crazy how it's actually reversed when a Hurricane makes landfall on Florida's west coast in the way Charley (and Ian) did, so moving from West to East. I think it's worse on the East coast cause once the front eye wall passes which can be pretty bad its self and had damaged a lot and weakened most structures/roofs then the eye moves over then BOOOM you get SLAMMED by the most powerful back-side eyewall and that eyewall takes out most everything else already weakened by the front eyewall but with even STRONGER winds. Atleast on Florida's west coast when the eyewall first moves over they know it's already the worst of the worst has passed but for us on the east coast the front eyewall is not the worst we experience since it'll always be the back eyewall. -I went directly thru Hurricane Jeanne when I was 15 years old. Eye passed directly over where I was on Jenkins Rd in Fort Pierce, FL. Went outside during the eye and stayed outside til the back eyewall started coming in and then for the first 5-10 mins during the back eyewall, it was amazing. and fun lol...but yeah, scary too. especially cause it was all at night and like 3am when the eye came over or around that time.
although the backside of Ian brought the storm surge to the barrier islands like Fort Myers Beach. Size, forward speed, Max speed, wind field, all determine how hard you are hit. And the angle the wind hits you. If there is a big building in front of you then you'll do better than if you are alone at the top of a hill catching all the wind. Fort Pierce had a double hit in 2004. Frances came in very slow and I think did more damage than Frances but it was hard to tell which hurricane did what they were so close together. In 2004 FL had 4 hurricanes in 6 weeks. It was crazy busy. You lived through a mega outbreak of FL Hurricanes. Ok, technically Ivan made landfall in AL but look at Pensacola/Pensacola Beach - some of the worst hit areas from Ivan. Thanks for watching the Charley video.
@@JimEdds Yeah we got hit hard here. For Frances I evacuated with my mom and grandma to the Ocala area to a motel. We still got our share of wind and rain in the Ocala area tho. But for Jeanne i choose to stay at my best friend's house cause her mom hosted a HUGE hurricane party and invited a lot of people to ride out the storm there and it was lots of fun haha. I also then went thru Hurricane Wilma at a friend's house in far south Port St.Lucie in i think October 2005. It got very intense. that one was during the day and watched it ripped off several roofs of well built nice houses around us.
I was out checking generators in the big bend area of the panhandle when it was supposed to be a maybe hurricane hitting there. Then it made a weird curly cue move and starting heading due east and RAPIDLY strengthening.
I was in the turner center in Arcadia during Charley. Scariest moment of my life.
I remember riding out Charley.... I live in Marion country ....we didn't get a big amount of damage but we lost power...I think they purposely shut our power off for some reason...but the worse thing about that season we had 4 hurricanes in a 6 weeks ......and I remember being so pissed.... we just get our power turned on from one hurricane and another one came...and we would be out of power again....after Charley there was.....Frances ...Ivan ..and Jeanne they all came within two weeks of each other.....but my job had power and I still had to go to work....after a hurricane it's so hot....the sun comes out and it's a dead windless heat..every time...and you got no ice...no water...no air conditioning...
I love learning about storms. This was a great video. You all did well and i hope you all continues to stay safe. 🙏👏👏
PRAYING for you all and all of the people that's going through difficult times in these storms.
Hurricane Ian said hold my beer
Thank goodness for people who do this. They're not only brave to go into places almost everyone else rightly leaves, but they provide useful information to weather services and news that can help people save lives.
As a guy from the tristate area that has never experienced hurricanes ever (I was on vacation when Sandy hit) the footage on its own gives me shivers. Well done!
Thank you . . . This video has 6 contributors and while we made it into a DVD after the storm, it had been sitting on the shelf for all these years. Then I got the "band" back together and we released it on CZcams. Turns out it's the most popular video on my channel. It has stood the test of time I believe because it shows a very powerful storm taking apart a small town and brave storm chasers not so brave. I don't know if there will ever be one like it. Thanks for watching.
34:25 This wind gust is insane! I’m surprised the Free Maps sign survived!
"Survived"
Remember that night well. Rode it out in central Florida. Now monitoring TS Ian.
I do to I was 8 years old then
Same Won’t forget
Yep we rode out this monster.....had 6 old massive trees down on our property ...one barely scraped the side of our house and blocked our way out of our main entrance but by the grace of God none of us were hurt !