Well, we've done as much as we can. Cars/motorcycle shoehorned in the garage, garbage cans in the Florida room (no room in the garage...sigh). We aren't worried about high water, but our massive oak trees in the front yard are a concern. What will be will be....
Made a last supply run yesterday. Surprisingly, things were calm at Walmart. Both cars gassed up.
There is a ratty little gas station on the main road in our area that I see very few people buying gas at. I've always thought that the gas station must make its money in other less-desirable business transactions, if you get my drift. But yesterday, with most of the major stations around us out of gas, cars were lined up there. That station always has ridiculously-high gas prices, waaaay out of proportion with other stations in the area, so they must be making some bucks. Since they always have their prices that high, they can't be accused of gouging. I'd be scared to buy gas there as who knows how long the gas has been in the tanks (I have never ONCE seen a gas tanker there).
The big airport in Orlando is closing sometime today. I was due to fly out yesterday on a long-awaited trip North at 6:45 a.m. on an Allegiant flight out of the smaller international airport here in Sanford, where I live. That flight and all others in and out were cancelled in the wee hours of the morning. Nothing else available at either airport, of course.
I was pretty ticked that Allegiant was cancelling flight so early in the day but I was told by a neighbor who works at that airport that since that is pretty much their major hub and they have planes "stored" there, all their effort has been thrown into getting those planes "out of Dodge". Of course, that ties up pilots and cabin crew. I'm still pretty pi$$ed at Allegiant for cancelling flights that early, but I guess I can see where their business interests lie. Yesterday was a frenzy of cancelling reservations and letting people know I wasn't coming.
This morning, I was trying to talk friends in Sarasota (where Milton apparently is heading at the moment) into coming over to the relative safety of Sanford. They say they'll "consider" it but I'm sure they won't. At this point, it would take them hours to get here.
Per the earlier discussion about why people don't evacuate: A lot of people don't evacuate because they've become "numb" to hurricane warnings. You have hours and days of dire warnings and "the sky is falling!" and then the hurricane passes over with minimal damage. After several years of that, they throw their hands in the air and say, "Well, nothing ever happens, why leave?"
And then, you have the people who just won't leave their houses/belongings unprotected. You have the folks with pets who might not be able to find "pet-friendly" accommodations or shelters. Ones that are scared of being stuck on the road. Some have elderly relatives who won't leave or can't be moved easily.
Some can't leave because of their jobs. My granddaughter's husband is a manager in the distribution center of a hardware chain. They HAVE to be there to get the deliveries in the warehouse and be ready to start sending them out the moment the storm ends. There are law enforcement officers (my sort-of son-in-law) and medical personnel/EMT's/fire personnel who can't desert their jobs. And you get the macho ones who proclaim, "NOBODY'S GOING TO TELL *ME* WHAT TO DO!"
AND, you get ones who fear they can't find hotel rooms/shelters on the road and feel that they'll be better hunkered down at home. I can understand the angst of being on the road and wondering if you can even get gas to get anywhere. I've seen overhead pics of I-75 and I-4 and they're awful. Tempers are flaring, people are getting desperate. I don't know how emergency vehicles are going to get through.
As of right now, Milton is going to skirt around us. At one point, it was going right over. We'll still get a lot of rain and wind, but I think we'll be OK.
I hear talk that there might be another one forming out there somewhere. Oh, please no.....the welcome mat has been brought in.