The Red Cross delivers snacks to Lincoln High School where Floridans have taken shelter from Hurricane Idalia on Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2023.

Harold Weaver has spent 55 of his 60 years in Taylor County. He’s weathered storms, big and small, but he’s not taking a chance with Hurricane Idalia.

“This one is too big,” Weaver said.

Weaver didn’t want to risk staying in his apartment behind the sawmill in Perry, Florida, which is just 20 miles from the Gulf of Mexico. He has his 4-year-old grandson, Karim, to worry about.

“I had a gut feeling, I need to get out,” Weaver said of his home in the rural coastal county that has become ground zero for a likely catastrophic Category-4 landfall.

He and his family took a shuttle from Perry to Tallahassee to weather the storm in one of the seven shelters in Tallahassee, Florida’s capital city. Franklin, Wakulla and Taylor counties, coastal areas on Apalachee Bay in the Big Bend region, did not have shelters available for evacuees, which forced some Floridians who live on the Gulf to travel hours to Tallahassee.





Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here