Hurricane Season
6/22/2017 (Permalink)
Some stats:
The peak time of the year for hurricanes here in the Atlantic region is June-November. On the Pacific the peak time of year is May- November.
Did you know the force of a hurricane is from 74-155+ miles per hour?
- The difference between a tropical storm and a hurricane is wind speed – tropical storms usually bring winds of 36 to 47 mph, whereas hurricane wind speeds are at least 74 mph.
- 40% of the hurricanes that occur in the United States hit Florida.
- Hurricanes rotate in a counter-clockwise direction around the eye.
- When the National Hurricane Center began giving official names to storms in 1953, they were all female.
The cost of hurricane damage is usually a couple million per storm. Hurricane Sandy though caused nearly $62 billion in damages once it hit the USA. $128 billion in damages was caused by Hurricane Katrina.
Some tips:
- Stay away from low-lying and flood prone areas.
- Always stay indoors during a hurricane, because strong winds will blow things around.
- Leave mobile homes and to go to a shelter.
- If your home isn't on higher ground, go to a shelter.
- If emergency managers say to evacuate, then do so immediately.