Years ago I remember being told Tampa has some ancient Indian blessing keeping it safe. Always laughed about it but now I’m starting to wonder.
So, why has Tampa been able to avoid being hit by a major hurricane for such a long time? Many people from the area give credit to the Native Americans of the Tocobaga Tribe which legend says, blessed the land keeping it safe from big storms.
Tampa Tocobaga History:
Back in the 900s, the Tocobaga tribe made the Tampa Bay area their home. They built villages out of shells and sand making temples, burial grounds, mounds and homes for their chiefs. Sadly, they were completely wiped out by disease and war from Spanish settlers. Now, the oldest remaining burial mound is located near Old Tampa Bay which many people think it keeping Tampa Bay safe.
Happy to prep and nothing happen than not prep and it goes south fastVery light rain here the last hour.
We didn't bother to do any prep, it seems it's always overkill.
Be safe up there. Still getting some wind and bands down here in Tampa, but no storm surge/flooding like in Pinellas and other areas.We are in the cone but to the left. We are about 20 minutes east of Tallahassee. Got food and candy. If the power is out past Friday I will go visit my sister in Orlando.
If he's like most college kids we'll check back in at noon.Told my son in Tallahassee to text me when he wakes up. Nothing yet.
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My kids are all still asleep. It’s not that bad here. Next couple hours should be the worst of it.Told my son in Tallahassee to text me when he wakes up. Nothing yet.
That’s my hurricane report. Thank you for subscribing.
More of a fishing community. I go Sea trout fishing up there every couple of years. Not alot going on up there. Took my wife once that was enough for her.8:09am. Just lost power. I’m about 60 miles west of Keaton beach where they say landfall was. I hope they didn’t get too much damage over there but it is the worst beach in Florida. Could use a nice renovation.
UPDATE:Told my son in Tallahassee to text me when he wakes up. Nothing yet.
That’s my hurricane report. Thank you for subscribing.
Kinda like here in SE Va...a storm is almost always going to hit the Outer Banks first so we're a little shielded.Years ago I remember being told Tampa has some ancient Indian blessing keeping it safe. Always laughed about it but now I’m starting to wonder.
So, why has Tampa been able to avoid being hit by a major hurricane for such a long time? Many people from the area give credit to the Native Americans of the Tocobaga Tribe which legend says, blessed the land keeping it safe from big storms.
Tampa Tocobaga History:
Back in the 900s, the Tocobaga tribe made the Tampa Bay area their home. They built villages out of shells and sand making temples, burial grounds, mounds and homes for their chiefs. Sadly, they were completely wiped out by disease and war from Spanish settlers. Now, the oldest remaining burial mound is located near Old Tampa Bay which many people think it keeping Tampa Bay safe.
I mean you could just look at the mountains of cuba and recognize any track that would have a major at tampa bay that didn't have to path over cuba is unique. A fast moving major coming from the east is more likely to hurt Tampa than the West.
I mean the track it took was pretty much the only way, needed a yucatan storm to juice up and go north and east. That takes a funky ridge/jet stream situation that normally only presents in parts of August and the carib cruisers are typically a june/july thing.Surprisingly enough, Idalia was the first recorded hurricane to pass through Apalachee Bay in that part of Florida.
Cedar Key. My favorite place in Florida.
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The New Port Richey Hooters is under water. :(The flooding is worrisome in low lying areas of Pinellas County…St Pete/Clearwater…they can’t take it much higher and high tide is still coming later. Water up to garages on Clearwater Beach north end.
No impact here, thankfully. We've had our fill of these things the last couple years. Concerned for Cedar Key area but I don't know any FBG over there.FL peeps, y'all good?
We lost power this morning at 8am. Sometime this afternoon the powers that be shared that we will be out of power for 7-14 days. Everything was just destroyed. I understand that because our entire power infrastructure was destroyed in Irma 6 years ago. I’m not trying to be a negative Nelly but why didn’t they build it back better then?FL peeps, y'all good?
All good here southeast of Tampa. No power outages with just some minor cleanup around the house.FL peeps, y'all good?
Luckily the afternoon high tide was countered by the weak wind…and the flooding around Tampa Bay didn’t get worse. But…there are some neighborhoods under a foot of water in south St Pete…I have 1 friend who’s going to have significant damage…but overall 90% of the shoreline seems ok.FL peeps, y'all good?
If we ever do get that direct hit we are screwed.The flooding is worrisome in low lying areas of Pinellas County…St Pete/Clearwater…they can’t take it much higher and high tide is still coming later. Water up to garages on Clearwater Beach north end.
No way Jose
Glad to hear it.Our little town got power last night. I am so relieved. It was only out for 40 hours, a day and a half. I panicked when they said 7-14 days.