The Denver Post

Monster strikes Florida

PANHANDLE SLAMMED BY DEADLY, HISTORIC STORM

- By Jay Reeves and Brendan Farrington

Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida Panhandle with terrifying winds of 155 mph Wednesday, splinterin­g homes and submerging neighborho­ods before continuing its destructiv­e charge inland across the Southeast. It was the most powerful hurricane to hit the continenta­l U.S. in nearly 50 years, and at least one death was reported during its passage.

Supercharg­ed by abnormally warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the Category 4 storm crashed ashore in the early afternoon near Mexico Beach, a tourist town about midway along the Panhandle, a 200mile stretch of whitesand beach resorts,

fishing towns and military bases. After it ravaged the Panhandle, Michael barreled into south Georgia as a Category 3 hurricane — the most powerful ever recorded for that part of the neighborin­g state.

It later weakened to a Category 1 hurricane, and there were reports it spawned possible tornadoes in central Georgia.

In north Florida, Michael battered the shoreline with sideways rain, powerful gusts and crashing waves, swamping streets and docks, flattening trees, shredding awnings and peeling away shingles. It set off transforme­r explosions and knocked out power to more than 388,000 homes and businesses.

A Panhandle man was killed by a tree that toppled on a home, Gadsden County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoma­n Anglie Hightower said. But she added that emergency crews trying to reach the home were hampered by downed trees and debris blocking roadways. The man wasn’t immediatel­y identified.

Damage in Panama City was extensive, with broken and uprooted trees and power lines down nearly everywhere.

Roofs were peeled off and homes split open by fallen trees. Twisted street signs lay on the ground. Residents emerged in the early evening to assess damage when rains stopped, though skies were still overcast and windy.

Vance Beu, 29, was staying with his mother at her apartment, Spring Gate Apartments, a small complex of singlestor­y wood frame apartment buildings. A pine tree punched a hole in their roof, and he said the roar of the storm sounded like a jet engine as the winds accelerate­d. Their ears even popped as the barometric pressure dropped.

“It was terrifying, honestly. There was a lot of noise. We thought the windows were going to break at any time. We had the inside windows kind of barricaded in with mattresses,” Beu said.

Kaylee O’Brien was crying as she sorted through the remains of the apartment she shared with three roommates at Whispering Pines apartments, where the smell of broken pine trees was thick in the air. Four pine trees had crashed through the roof of her apartment, nearly hitting two people. Her 1yearold Siamese cat, Molly, was missing.

“We haven’t seen her since the tree hit the den. She’s my baby,” O’Brien said, her face wet with tears.

In Apalachico­la, Sally Crown rode out the storm in her house. The worst damage — she thought — was in her yard. Multiple trees were down. But after the storm passed, she drove to check on the cafe she manages and saw breathtaki­ng destructio­n.

“It’s absolutely horrendous. Catastroph­ic,” Crown said. “There’s flooding. Boats on the highway. A house on the highway. Houses that have been there forever are just shattered.”

Gov. Rick Scott announced soon after the powerful eye had swept inland that “aggressive” search and rescue efforts would get underway as conditions allowed. He urged people to stay off debrislitt­ered roads.

“If you and your family made it through the storm safely, the worst thing you could do now is act foolishly,” he said.

Michael was a meteorolog­ical brute that sprang quickly from a weekend tropical depression, going from a Category 2 on Tuesday to a Category 4 by the time it came ashore. It was the most powerful hurricane on record to hit the Panhandle.

More than 375,000 people up and down the Gulf Coast were urged to evacuate as Michael closed in. But the fastmoving, faststreng­thening storm didn’t give people much time to prepare.

 ?? Pedro Portal, The Miami Herald ?? Haley Nelson inspects the damage to her family’s property in Panama City after Michael, the most powerful hurricane to hit the continenta­l U.S. in nearly 50 years, made landfall in Florida’s Panhandle on Wednesday.
Pedro Portal, The Miami Herald Haley Nelson inspects the damage to her family’s property in Panama City after Michael, the most powerful hurricane to hit the continenta­l U.S. in nearly 50 years, made landfall in Florida’s Panhandle on Wednesday.
 ?? Gerald Herbert, The Associated Press ?? Kaylee O’Brien cries in her apartment after four pine trees fell on it Wednesday as Hurricane Michael hit Panama City, Fla.
Gerald Herbert, The Associated Press Kaylee O’Brien cries in her apartment after four pine trees fell on it Wednesday as Hurricane Michael hit Panama City, Fla.

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