Hurricane threat from Ian prompts preparations for flooding, power outages in Brevard

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Though the track had shifted westward, Brevard County still remained solidly within the eastern edges of Tropical Storm Ian's forecast cone Sunday.

And before Ian potentially intensifies into a major hurricane over the warm Gulf of Mexico, Melbourne resident Pat Alderman took action to ward off potential flooding.

Alderman bought ten 50-pound bags of sand, along with 50 empty sandbags, at Lowe's in West Melbourne to fortify her back patio door against floodwaters. She has a backyard pond, and her soils are saturated with recent rainfall.

Lowe's Assistant Store Managers Brandy Fincher and Heather Fox wheel ten 50-pound bags of sand toward Melbourne resident Pat Alderman's truck Sunday morning in West Melbourne.
Lowe's Assistant Store Managers Brandy Fincher and Heather Fox wheel ten 50-pound bags of sand toward Melbourne resident Pat Alderman's truck Sunday morning in West Melbourne.

"We have roll-down shutters already, so we don't have to board up. We just roll. We have a generator," Alderman said, standing alongside her shopping cart Sunday morning inside Lowe's.

"This is from decades of living in Florida. If you've lived here for a while, you need to have all these things. Transplants don't understand this," she said.

While Alderman shopped, National Hurricane Center forecasters were predicting Ian would strengthen into a hurricane Monday morning, rapidly grow into a major hurricane Tuesday morning, and make landfall Friday morning by plowing into Florida's Big Bend region.

A caveat: Uncertainty in the long-term track and intensity forecast of Ian is higher than usual, the National Weather Service station in Melbourne announced Sunday morning.

“A slight shift to the east in the track would increase impacts. A slight westward shift would decrease impacts," Brendan Schaper, a meteorologist at the NWS Melbourne station, said of Ian's potential damages to the Space Coast.

"But it's always best to be prepared for the worst and hope for the best," he said.

In West Melbourne, Lowe's customer Pat Alderman, at left, waits while Store Manager Thomas Wiese and Assistant Store Manager Heather Fox load bags of sand into her truck ahead of Tropical Storm Ian's potential impacts.
In West Melbourne, Lowe's customer Pat Alderman, at left, waits while Store Manager Thomas Wiese and Assistant Store Manager Heather Fox load bags of sand into her truck ahead of Tropical Storm Ian's potential impacts.

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Tropical-storm-force winds may arrive Tuesday

Schaper recommends that Brevard County residents complete hurricane preparations soon.

“Right now, the earliest reasonable arrival time for tropical storm-force winds is late Tuesday night into Wednesday morning,"  Schaper said.

"The most likely arrival time of tropical storm-force winds is during the day on Wednesday and into Wednesday night," he said.

“A cone is sort of a guide, but conditions can be hazardous outside of that. It doesn't mean that you have to be right in the middle, or even on the edge, of that cone — you can be just outside and still feel the impact," he said.

"Of course, the forecast can change as well. So that that cone of uncertainty can change," he said.

Pallets of water jugs and Gatorade greet customers inside the front doors of Lowe's in West Melbourne ahead of Tropical Storm Ian's possible impacts.
Pallets of water jugs and Gatorade greet customers inside the front doors of Lowe's in West Melbourne ahead of Tropical Storm Ian's possible impacts.

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Brevard County Emergency Management officials have shared a list of hurricane-kit items in advance of Ian's approach:

  • Battery-powered or hand-crank radio and a NOAA Weather Radio with tone alert.

  • Cash.

  • Local maps.

  • First-aid kit.

  • Manual can opener for food.

  • Infant formula and supplies.

  • Flashlights and extra batteries.

  • Cell phone and portable chargers.

  • Water — one gallon per person per day for at least three days, for drinking and sanitation.

  • Food — at least a three-day supply of non-perishable foods.

  • Important family documents, such as copies of insurance policies and ID cards, stored in portable, waterproof containers or digitally on a flash drive.

  • Feminine supplies and personal hygiene items.

  • Moist towelettes, garbage bags and plastic ties.

Debbie and Steve Cash and their dog Beau shop for a few items in anticipation of Tropical Storm Ian's rains Sunday morning at Lowe’s in West Melbourne.
Debbie and Steve Cash and their dog Beau shop for a few items in anticipation of Tropical Storm Ian's rains Sunday morning at Lowe’s in West Melbourne.

Free sandbags available to ward off flooding

Bracing for possible localized flooding, Brevard County Public Works and the Brevard County Sheriff's Office are offering up to 10 free sandbags per vehicle through at least Monday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. at four distribution sites:

  • Chain of Lakes, 2300 Truman Scarborough Way, Titusville.

  • Mitchell Ellington Park, 577 Hall Road, Merritt Island.

  • Wickham Park, 2500 Parkway Drive, Melbourne.

  • Eastern Florida State College Palm Bay campus, 250 Community College Parkway SE.

Inside Lowe's in West Melbourne, pallets loaded with hurricane-list items greet customers just inside the front doors. Store Manager Thomas Wiese said more shoppers prepped for Ian on Saturday than on Sunday — the cone's center shifted westward from focusing on Tampa-Southwest Florida to the Tallahassee area.

"Sales trends (Saturday): A lot of customers coming in for water, propane, generators, batteries, flashlights, sandbags," Wiese said.

The Lowe's hurricane pallets offered 3-gallon jugs of water, eight-packs of Gatorade, outdoor mold and mildew cleaners, 5-gallon gasoline cans, batteries, weather radios and generators manufactured by Craftsman, Firman and Briggs & Stratton.

"A lot of customers are still preparing. With the uncertainty of the storm tracks and how much it's changed over the past two days, customers are still being prepared," Wiese said.

Rick Neale is the South Brevard Watchdog Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY (for more of his stories, click here.) Contact Neale at 321-242-3638 or rneale@floridatoday.com. Twitter: @RickNeale1

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This article originally appeared on Florida Today: Hurricane threat from Ian prompts preparations for flooding in Brevard