raid
Dad Photographer
Storm Erika may make it to here on Thursday and maybe it won't. I was up at 5:30am. so I wrote up a list with my camera equipment that I would take along (to save) if we left town.
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Raid,
You're going to need a bigger truck!😛
Storm Erika may make it to here on Thursday and maybe it won't. I was up at 5:30am. so I wrote up a list with my camera equipment that I would take along (to save) if we left town.
...
Maybe, you should also write up a similar "hurricane evacuation list"even if there is a zero chance that your location will ever be hit by some hurricane.
Fortunately, the storm seems to be dissipating. Florida could get a lot of rain, though.
Raid:
All Cameras
All lenses
Both Daughters
Wife
Self
Take no chances!
Takumar 50mm f1.4 m mount? I never heard of this animal. Please explain.
Don't forget any pets... and a charger for your phone (one of those small portable power packs would be good).
Edit: and a torch, and scanned copies of insurance documents.
Most of my camera bodies are stored in a Nanuk 940 case and my glass is in a seperate Nanuk 925 case. In an evacuation scenario there is no stop and think what's where, just grab the cases and go.
Home owner's insurance will replace the gadgets after a storm.
The key is to think about those things you can't replace. Perhaps the most important of those is your photo collection.
My family and I lived in Canberra, ACT, Australia for six months in 2003. We were there for the bush fire that destroyed 500 homes in January 2003. From that experience, I learned that the only material things worth saving are your photos - hard copies and digital.
And we can rest easy in Florida, Erika is rapidly degenerating.
I lived in Florida for my first 18 years, 1940 through 1959. I weathered many hurricanes with my family and there were no problems. The worst thing that ever happened was that a casement window blew open, and dad managed to shut it against the wind. The building code in Miami required a reinforced concrete tie beam over the walls, below the roof, to hold everything together. We were about 3 blocks from Biscayne Bay, and only 3 or 4 miles from the ocean, so there was a lot of water in the wind. No one ever said we should evacuate.
Raid, are you close to the water? I wonder if the code requirements are similar in your area.