I'm guessing none of you are actually from Florida. My house is brick/cement not going to blow away... if my house floods it floods but it'll be maybe a couple inches at most so what? Are you allergic to the water?
And I'm in the panhane, idk a couple hundred feet above sea level and an hour away from the the nearest beach.
The only thing I'm worried about is my car and not having power for god knows how long.
Please help
>not going to blow away
It literally could you mong
>couple of inches
FUCKING LMAOOOOOO
Panhandle*
Also you're fucking retarded if you expect millions of people to evacuate unnecessarily. Dont give advice when you don't know shit about what you're talking about.
If you don't HAVE to evacuate more than likely you'll just be causing a problem for the people that actually need to, by taking up hotel rooms and causing unneeded traffic.
Fucking pussy.
It literally won't you pussy autist.
What's funny? Like I said idk if you've experience a hurricane before and idk if read what I said or do you really think every house is going to get flooded up to the ceiling? Especially in the panhandle... flooding outside will be more than a couple of inches in SOME areas yes but not INSIDE every house if you read my post.
pls post again in a few days with pics of your new indoor swimming pool
If you can, I'd try and find a parking structure or something similar and park it there, have someone with a truck or something give you a ride home and wait it out, throwing a car cover or a tarp over it wouldn't hurt either.
ya a car cover definitely wouldn't blow away in a hurricane lol
M8, you should have thought of this days ago. Park near a wall or garage door. Leaving it in the open is acceptable, if a bit ridiculous. If it's insured you shouldn't worry about it to much and just leave it in the driveway. Just don't park it in a low lying area.
>t. 954