I headed to my daughters house in Lehigh Acres Florida which is inland but near Fort Myers.
Lots of other people were evacuating. I left work in Clearwater Florida. The traffic jam on on the Howard Franklin bridge was unbelievable. It took me over an hour to cross the bridge, and since I have a stick shift, my left leg was giving out.
I loaded up my pickup truck with essential items including financial records and other important items such as pictures of my family. I headed south to my daughter's home.
The next day I was sitting in her home watching the weather reports. Charley was just passing Fort Myers. I remember thinking about how my house would be flooded and wondering where I would go to get my hair cut as my barber shop would be underwater. I wondered if the safety deposit box at my bank would be underwater.
The announcer on the TV suddenly said that the hurricane had changed direction. I remember feeling great relief and saying "Thank God." My daughter pointed out that it now was headed at us. She immediately ran outside and started picking up loose items.
The center of Charlie (a small but very intense storm) passed within 60 or 70 miles of us. We experienced lots of wind and rain but suffered no major damage. It did not hit the Tampa Bay area.
At its peak intensity of 150 mph (240 km/h), Hurricane Charley struck the northern tip of Captiva Island and the southern tip of North Captiva Island, causing severe damage in both areas. Charley, the strongest hurricane to hit southwest Florida since Hurricane Donna in 1960, then continued to produce severe damage as it made landfall on the peninsula near Port Charlotte. The hurricane continued to the north by northeast along the Peace River corridor, devastating the small cities of Punta Gorda, Cleveland, Fort Ogden, Nocatee, Arcadia, Zolfo Springs,Sebring, and Wauchula. Zolfo Springs was isolated for nearly two days as masses of large trees, power pole, power lines, transformers, and debris filled the streets. Wauchula sustained gusts to 147 mph, buildings in the downtown areas caved in onto Main Street. Ultimately, the storm passing through East Orlando still carrying winds gusting up to 106 mph (171 km/h). Interestingly, the city of Winter Park, north of Orlando, also sustained considerable damage since its many old, large oak trees had not experienced high winds. Falling trees tore down power utilities, smashed cars, and their huge roots lifted underground water and sewer utilities. Damage in the state totaled to over $13 billion (2004 USD). Charley, initially expected to hit further north in Tampa, caught many Floridians off-guard due to a sudden change in the storm's track as it approached the state. Throughout the United States, Charley caused 10 deaths and $15.4 billion in damage (2004 USD), making Charley the second costliest hurricane in United States history at the time (it has since dropped to 5th). Charlie was a very small, very fast moving storm, otherwise damage would have been much more severe. Although mitigation and restoration was promised by FEMA to the poor communities of Hardee and DeSoto counties during town meetings, the agency did not pass the cursory planning stages, and the promised reconstruction/compensation was never implemented/provided.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Charley When I returned to Tampa which had had beautiful weather during Hurricane Charlie, I found that many people had evacuated to Orlando and had experienced more of the hurricane than I had.
After that when a hurricane threatened Tampa Bay, my co-workers would ask if I planned to evacuate. They had developed this strange theory that I attracted hurricanes.