PINELLAS COUNTY, Fla., (NewsNation) — A Pinellas County man tells NewsNation that while he’s lived in Florida for many years, Hurricane Milton has a particularly ominous feeling about it.
“We’re starting to get some of the outer bands,” said Harry Berg, a local resident and uncle of NewsNation meteorologist Max Tsaparis. “This storm has got a really bad feel to it — and I’ve been here for many years.”
Berg said his decision not to evacuate the area doesn’t mean he isn’t taking the storm seriously. But it’s part of “being a Floridian.”
“You have to prepare for this. What we’re getting ready to face is something that we’ve never seen before, the likes of this … to make a long story short, you just have to make sure you’re repaired.”
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Berg said his primary concern at the moment is wind. He added that if conditions become too dangerous by Wednesday afternoon they will “seek shelter.”
“We have hurricane-proof windows, we’re boarded up correctly, we have enough rations, we have generators, we have everything,” he said.
The National Hurricane Center has predicted Milton will likely weaken, but remain a major hurricane when it makes landfall late Wednesday or early Thursday.