Medicine Hat News

Canadians living in the path of hurricane Irma preparing for the worst

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The house belonging to Audrey Foy, a young woman living in Florida who is originally from Quebec, looked like a bunker Friday.

It was hard to find her front door as the facade of her home had been boarded up in anticipati­on of hurricane Irma, which was scheduled to land on the peninsula this weekend.

“I’m thinking the worst,” said Foy, who lives in Hollywood, Fla. “That our roof will be blown off. That we won’t have electricit­y for weeks or months. And I’m afraid.”

Many Quebecers living in and around Fort Lauderdale were preparing to be hit by the biggest hurricane of their lives.

Police vehicles circled around the rare gas stations that still had gasoline Friday. Large retail stores were packed with people but were getting ready to close, like most stores in the region.

Nancy Teske Wissler, who is originally from Buckingham, Que., and her husband Dean were installing large boards over their windows at their home in Davie. As a nurse, she can’t leave the city because she needs to be at work in the local hospital.

Her pool was full of water, though, which she believes will help with flushing the toilets after the storm.

“This is very very dangerous,” she said. “The winds will blow everything away. It’s a category 4. It’s a big girl coming.”

Back at Foy’s home, her kitchen table was stacked with provisions: baby food for her three-month-old, water and a lot of propane.

“We have bread and peanut butter,” she said. “They say we aren’t going to have electricit­y so we can’t make sandwiches with meat and what not.

“We’re going to grab all our belongings that are important. Birth certificat­es, passports, insurance papers. Anything that can help us just in case the roof gets blown off — at least we’ll have those. We’ll just wait and see.”

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