Appreciate it. When you get a storm surge in excess of 10 or more feet, you grab your papers and sit on the roof.
Ian wiped out a lot of well built houses in Ft. Myers.
Can't fight water.
Yep, been there, done that. Hugo had 27"s of water in our 1st floor (on slab, the other half of the fist floor is up 3ft [we don't live in the City of Charleston, SC but they own the 6 ft wide easement next to us that had a 4 ft. wide, 3 ft. deep ditch on it, which for some reason] {in their idiotic City infinite wisdom} they had installed a 14" diameter pipe and filled it in) thus CREATING the flooding of 8 properties.
At any rate, a fallen tree poked a hole in the roof over the dining room on the second level (4 steps up) with the 3 ft + crawl space.
The insurance company fought their divisions about whether the moister in the crawl space from the flooding underneath the floor or water coming in from the branch sticking through the roof caused the floor to warp. This only took 2+ years for them to pay us. There was essentially no damage to the part of he ouse on slab, just a matter of getting the mud, shrimp & fiddler crabs out of that part of the house.
But the next door neighbors whose newer home (my parents designed and built our own home) is built 12 feet from the ground to the newer "Hurricane standards" had a section of it's roof ripped off and had WAY more damage than us.
There was no power for three weeks. The wind meter had broke at 183 MPH, so the wind gusted at least that high.
In Saipan, in 2014, we had 223 MPH gusts, only one person was killed (The lesson: don't hide in a building that has been designated as unfit to live in).
BUT: power was out for 4 months.
I'll go on that you can't truly prepare for "Mother Nature" because you cannot predict exactly and to what extent what she will do next.