Post pics if you can...BillyK said:How did your marina fare?
Anyone know if SeaView harbor in long port survived?
It's funny you mention that. CBS3 had a reporter from Miami flown in to help with coverage. Ironically, he was in New Gretna, where my boat is sitting on the hard so I was interested in his report. One of the anchors asked him how this compared to others he's reported on in Miami and he, paused (looked like he stifled a chuckle), and proceeded to list the ones he was in since 2003 (including Katrina and Rita) then said "well, the wind is different."MrBill_FLL said:Glad most are OK, but please remember, this was not the big one...

How did your marina fare?
Anyone know if SeaView harbor in long port survived?
It's funny you mention that. CBS3 had a reporter from Miami flown in to help with coverage. Ironically, he was in New Gretna, where my boat is sitting on the hard so I was interested in his report. One of the anchors asked him how this compared to others he's reported on in Miami and he, paused (looked like he stifled a chuckle), and proceeded to list the ones he was in since 2003 (including Katrina and Rita) then said "well, the wind is different."
boat name: serenity nowHi Karen, wish I knew what happened, yes maybe she's landed atop a building somewhere. Some boats landed atop railroad bridges. I think I brought this on by renaming her. Original name was Heelin Laddie. 10 years no name. Last spring we painted Serenity Now astern (Seinfeld favorite of our family) & now she may lie at the bottom for all I know... My marina living pal (Ruben) continued to look for her. He will be doing diving salvage work also & says he will keep looking... I felt last night as if I didn't deserve to have a boat nor did I take my responsibilities seriously enough. Not much sleep. Ironically 5 vessels that rode out the storm on their moorings came through unscathed. Me I put her by marina up
A sheltered creek area & with the full moon tide, 12 foot storm surge & 70-100 mph gusts it added up to disaster. Feel for the folks without homes though. Maybe next year is a break year from owning a sailboat- regroup & kayak or sailing canoe! Love ya,
Schuyler
Sorry, its bad, but could be a LOT worse. This was a wake up call, sure there's lots of damage, but nobody has broken windows, and wet beds. like I said over 130mph, things change drastically. I saw Charlie's damage on the east coast, and had no idea it hit as a cat 4. on the east coast side (vero/daytona) it looked like cat1. -on the frame houses, I saw some cbs 1st floors and frame uppers. In many cases the only thing left on the 2nd floor was the toilet and bathtub. This was not the big one. its a wake up call on what can happen in a big one. Best wishes to all, and please and stay safe.I disagree, this was the big one for the Northeast. I rode out Charley at ground zero, Punta Gorda saw the wind damage. Spent 2 weeks without power or water and backed up sewage systems. It was bad but we had no storm surge. The tons of sand that moved in the 24 hours of this storm and the size of the storm that hit a basically unprepared area is far worse. We had building codes in place here in Florida that afforded a basic level of protection. The tick tacky stick build homes in the coastal areas were just asking for it. Many looked like converted vacation bungalows. 1000's maybe 10's of thousands will end up homeless after everything is inspected and people discovered what the storm surge has done. A house can look fine only to discover it moved on the foundation and must be torn down. Sure higher winds could have done more damage but it is the surge that causes total destruction.
I feel very bad for the people who need to live there and try to go on. I hope they have good flood insurance and are good advocates for themselves because you are big news now but in 2 weeks your are old news. Also as I write this I can bet the low life "contractors" are flooding the area to begin to rip people off. Recovery will be long slow and painful. As a survivor I wish you well.