It's like cyclones in the tropics. You learn, you adapt, you plan, you get on with life, and sometimes you just plain run out of luck.
Ghoti
Too true.
The first year I lived up here and there was a cyclone warning a group of us packed up and went inland. The cyclone didn’t eventuate.
The next time a group of us camped in the office of a friend in a heritage stone block building.
The cyclone didn’t eventuate.
Over the years of living with these threats, I haven’t become complacent but I have become pragmatic. Leaving my house means leaving my animals behind and where do you go anyway?
Now when there is a cyclone warning , I clear my yard of anything that might become a flying missile, check batteries and torches, buy a supply of fresh drinking water and food that doesn’t need cooking and have a small bag with essentials packed in case I have to get out in a hurry or get rescued. Include animal food and a couple of CDs of photos in that. (Also a bottle of rum and a block of chocolate)
It’s more expensive to build or renovate a house up here than down south because building codes insist on extra structural reinforcement because of the cyclone threat.
With all the rebuilding that needs to be done in the Victorian bush fire region it seems to me that it is the perfect time for building regulations to be changed so that it is mandatory to include some kind of fireproof bunker in those plans. From other posts on this and another site and also from that ABC programme last night it appears this is doable for not too much money.