I was not in it, but I remember it. And looking back on the track I remember why. This was the one that was coming in east at the FL peninsula and decided to do a massive turn. We were preparing for it and got reprieve, so I must have paid attention to whatever media came out at the time about it.Yes... High end Cat 3. Just shy of Cat 4.
You were in Elena?
I was in Biloxi in a brick house about 1 mile inland.
Longest night ever with 125+ mph sustained winds for about 8 hours straight in pure darkness. We had candles and flashlights, but if you looked outside you couldn't see 3 ft through the driving rain.
Some of that 8 hours was nighttime and some morning daylight. The only calm was when the eye went over (early morning). We went outside and it was eerie. Sun was shining, perfectly calm, but a wall of dark clouds 360° around us. All the trees that were still standing were stripped clean of their leaves. Took about 1/2 hour for the eye to pass, then the wind came out of the opposite direction for another 4 hours. Most of the trees that survived the first round of winds succumbed to the winds coming from the opposite direction on the second round.
The house like many others only had roof damage. When one shingle let go they peeled back entire sections.
Yeah….you were center stage for that bitch. Good thing it was just shingles and not the entire roof. I’ve seen here the difference between shingles (blue tarp time) and a roof totally gone. Usually this is determined by whether there was a bit of 1/2 inch plywood on windows.