Hurricane Ivan Storm Surge Video - Pensacola Beach, Florida
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- Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
- www.UltimateCha...
Mike Theiss of Ultimate Chase documented Hurricane Ivan on Pensacola Beach Barrier Island in a high rise building. Watch as Mike shares his experience and imagine if that was "You" all alone in the pitch dark in a building completely surrounded by rushing water as a Cat 3 Hurricane makes landfall. This was an extremely creepy and scary documentation being trapped inside a building with no power and wind screaming like a monstor outside. Mike was trapped on the island for 2 days before being able to get a ride via boat back to the mainland....
This storm will forever haunt me! I am thankful that my family survived and wasn't hurt. Feeling your house shift and your roof being torn off is very traumatic. Pensacola has never fully recovered and I will never be the same!
It's actually SHOCKING how under reported the death toll was. We lived just over the bridge from Perdido Key. While listening to the radio numerous people called from the Bayou Grande subdivision, crying and asking the radio station why no Emergency vehicles could come out because there were "dead bodies floating in the water." A friend of ours who lived there also said that they saw more dead bodies there ALONE than were reported for the Pensacola total deaths.
To be alone in this, surrounded by so much force and destruction, knowing everyone around you is in danger because you’re the few who are safe, that’s chilling. Especially the parts in the beginning showing the dark, pitch black hallways, with the screaming winds outside. Amazing recording.
Absolutely incredible video, Mike! The nighttime footage is amazing. I'm pretty familiar with that nerve-wracking, totally isolated feeling being stuck in an enclosed location, in complete darkness, during the height of a major hurricane... and your footage captures that perfectly! That wind noise between 2:20 and 2:30 is so eerie!
I thought it was a cat. 4, and if it was, could you please fill me in if and when it strengthened into a cat. 4? I remember that thing hitting us here in Atlanta as a cat. 1. I had to take my Guide Dog Rosie out during a lull, and it wasn't much of one. I remember a branch hitting my back, but I was alright. Rosie was just fine, too, but we were quite spooked.
I lived in Navarre during hurricane Ivan. The wind around the house sounded like screaming spirits. We were just north of highway 98 about 1/2 mile north of the sound. It was terrifying. Awesome video.
I love the fact that they just filmed throughout the entire 8/9 minutes and didn't say much of anything. There is nothing more frustrating when you have someone trying to talk about what's happening in these vids. To watch this was riveting. No voice over needed.
When I was a kid, around 3 or 4, I sat through this hurricane while my grandmother was bawling her eyes out. It was the first time my family had been separated during a hurricane, usually we just. kinda congregated at someone's house. Anyways, for some stupid reason, my grandmother had the wooden door open so I could see out the screen door. There was destruction and chaos everywhere. At one point, I was looking at my old dollhouse my grandfather had made for me before I was born. It got ripped off of the porch, which it was nailed to. I cured for about an hour over that thing which, looking back, is unreasonable. In the end, the roof got ripped off the house I was in. My great grandparents barely survived. Their whole house was demolished. The only way they survived is by sitting in the bathroom, which was the only thing left standing.
During this video, the howling of the winds reminded me of this incident. They sent, and still send, shivers up my spine every time I hear them.
My father used to make light of the hurricanes because of where we lived (mid-Atlantic, inland 100 miles), and storms that did come in tended to be on the weakening phase and just blew through without doing much. Then my big sister experience a blow-by from a storm which had crossed the peninsula after moving to Florida. Not much to laugh at when you're in one of these.
much peace and respect! 😢✌
What a scary thing go have gone through....
That is so sad
I was there. i was just 3 years old. I was screaming and crying as Ivan's winds started to roar. The eyewall, was terrible. During the eyewall a surge of water came in our house,I got scared and dropped my toys in the surge and when the water pulled back in,so did my toys. all i saw outside was a stormy sea on land. It was dark as night. i saw my toys drift away as well. my mom slammed the door, we went in the closet. i heard a bunch of things falling at water. We slept there. In the morning, we were looking at the damage. i stepped in a pile of seaweed that was on our door step. it was hard, there my toys were.
Amazing how the Futureo house (UFO house) was built in the 60s and made it through this...only people from Pensacola will know what I mean!
I want to own that house one day.
the design was to withstand a hurricane
YourLockerzPal I think you can rent it. I used to drive by there a lot going to work. I haven't seen it in years I still remember the little green dudes too
UFO are not real👎👎👎☝👆 your a knuckle head👾👾👾✊✊✊👊
That thing is dope lol especially the alien in the window
2:19 Brings back flashbacks, the sound of that howling wind filled the whole room. I was only two when Ivan hit and yet I can recall the roaring wind.
It sounded like freight trains for 10 straight hours
That was 2 years before i was born,i was born in TN
@UltimateChase I just gotta say. You have big balls my friend. I remember Ivan, I rode it out with a friend in cantonment, and I was quite petrified with that distinct howling noise you only get with a strong hurricane. But to be there that close, and look Ivan in the eye, you got my respect. Thanks for the footage, as a pensacola native, I never really saw the damage with the 3 mile bridge destroyed for so long.
Hurricane Francine has triggered a lot of memories
I too lived in Cantonment during Ivan, Corner of 29 an Archer rd. An Yes That Howling Allll night was deafening, after all these years nothing has ever come close to that sound. 🥺
Sitting in the darkness. At the top of every hour holding a battery-operated radio to my ear listening for any updates. Tears began streaming down my face as I heard call after call from desperate people that had not evacuated, and had now been driven to their attics by the rising water. Giving their names and address in case they didn't make it. And of seeing those that had drowned 😭
That September 2004, I was 4 months pregnant. 2024 that son is now in Pensacola for school. 😢Last night I prayed for those desperate voices from the past. An thanked God for his many blessings 😢🥲
Mike, amazing footage!! Very interesting to see the water seeping through the concrete like that!! Very scary stuff!!
5 Stars and an add to my favs!!
What 5 stars???
Scary footage. Ivan is the main reason I didn’t move back to Pensacola at the time. The whole city seemed depressed and worn out for over two years. Folks were mentally spent. Took a while to recover. Thinking of the beach. I remember how tall the sand dunes were back in the early 80s. They were like little mountains to a 5 year old. The beach is still beautiful but has transformed through the decades due to hurricanes. Sand dunes are no where near as tall as they were. Believe it or not the sand was even whiter then. Miss living there and near those beautiful beaches.
Ive been through Frederick,Erin,Opal,and Ivan,and all the "rain makers" in between here In Pensacola,and nothing had me more worried than Ivan did.
I agree. Even Hurricane Katrina didnt have as much wallop than Ivan where I lived at the time (Crestview). Ivan had our power out for a long time and made us have to really survive. Closest I've ever gotten to living in a post-apocalyptic world.
+Daniel Chance it was scary for sure
λɴΘɴΎɱΘƲȘ Opal freaked me out. Ivan wasn't far behind.
Opel took my best friend that was a hella storm
I love your videos - very amazing and educational. People need to make videos like this to show how dangerous storm surges are and how fast the water can rise. The no 1 cause of death in hurricanes is drowning due to storm surge. I have no doubt that your work saves lives 👍🏼
Finally left Florida after this one, can always visit. Living in the Texas hills now.
I live in Navarre and I've lived through hurricanes like Betsy and Opal and Ivan and Dennis, and I can tell you it is unbelievably scary. Never stay home. Always evacuate to safety or to a place that is safer than your home. Never stay on an island. You cannot hold up the walls or stop such a force of destruction. You cannot save yourself much less anyone else. My advice is leave when they tell you to.
I remember going through this storm. When I tell you. This was the scariest experience I’ve ever had.
i lived through this, had a tornado come through my backyard. went outside to help my dad shut his bed cover on his truck. the wind blew me on my ass. sounds like a train shit was scary as hell. never again will i sit thru a category 4 hurricane.
Hurricane Ivan destroyed our beautiful beach front condo. We came back months after the storm to see the damage ourselves. The roads were all washed away, the parking lot to our building was completely gone. The in ground pool was propped against the building. And the lobby was so full of sand we had to crouch to get into the stair well. It was incredible to think what occurred during that storm, but now I know!
Ivan was HUGE. I was 100 miles to the East, in Panama City, and we had sustained gale force winds for over 12 hours even there.
I lived through hurricane Ivan here in Jamaica. Had to house neighbors. And since that several other hurricanes but thank God we made it through. Just thinking of the Bahamians
Incredible footage here, Mike! the wind sounded very spooky and I can only image how fast your adrenelin was pumping. Love this video and thank you so much for sharing it with me-5 stars! :)
Wow! I remember waiting for this to be over. I don't think I will ever sit through one this strong again. It tore up Pensacola!
I went to Pensacola, Fl. in Oct 2005 and they were pretty much still recovering. There is a bridge that they don't use anymore.
I was living there then. I lived in a trailer park in Myrtle Grove and I was at the Civic Center shelter before it even opened. My trailer got cut in half by a pine tree. FEMA helped immensely.
this was my first hurricane, and nothing has beaten it yet for me. I'll never forget waking up in the middle of the night and seeing the tops of the pines almost touching the ground from the wind only when lightning struck....
My first hurricane was Ike in 08. We lived on the bolivar peninsula which is east of Galveston which got the worst of the storm. We evacuated and stayed a little north or Houston and it was incredible. People who haven't been through it wouldn't understand what 110 mph winds are like. It was crazy. Our house ended up being washed away by the 20 foot storm surge. All that was left of our house was the concrete slab that it stood on, and half of that was actually gone too.
+Reckk 110? That's weak lol. During Ivan we were getting about 175 sustained, 185 gusts. It was a beast
110 is definitely not weak. It is 1 shy of major hurricane strength. It isn't cat 5 strength or anything but not weak. Ike did much more damage and had 5 more feet of surge than Ivan did even though it was only a cat 2
One of the worst nights of my life. Sitting there in my house by candlelight and listening to the huge pine trees snapping and thundering onto the ground... wondering if the next one was gonna land in my living room.
I lives through that hurricane and remain here. Our beaches still haven't fully recovered.
I stayed at a friend's house in Cordova Park during this hurricane. At times, the back door of her home would fly open because of the wind. The whole house shook violently. My dad and I sat on the front porch watching transformers blow across the neighborhood. The next morning we tried to get to our house in Avalon Beach only to find that the bridge had been obliterated. Talk about a crazy storm! It took us two days to find out our house had been destroyed.
Thank you ...15 years ago ...
Wow! Incredible video!! I'll never forget that night!!
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I don't get why they called it a Cat 3 when the storm was producing much higher winds and began pounding the Gulf Coast 5-6 hours before the eye made landfall. They should consider that when the rate the hurricanes, as Ivan's wind speed slowed down to a Category 3 just before the eye hit, not before that. I remember it getting bad outside at 9:30 pm and I went to my mom's in Crestview. That's when the power went out and things were hitting the boards on the windows there by 11pm. So, so much damage everywhere, including Navarre and Ft Walton Beach.
I know what you mean, we took refuge in the same City (I lived in Holt at the time)
Started getting bad in Gulf Shores around 4:30 and the eye went over my head at 2:15 AM. We were getting Hurricane force gust by 7-8 for sure. It was freaking intense and I was In katrina as well but the winds in Ivan were intense. Katrina was different.
Rode this storm out in Pleasant Grove on the south of Gulf Beach Hwy on Weller Ave. Special night to be sure. Luckily I had lots of beer to drink. Not 5 miles down the road at Grande Lagoon people were dying. At one time shortly before landfall I thought the roof would come off. I took example from my mother's cat and hid in the back bedroom for a bit. Would I evacuate for a similar storm? Hell no. The time to leave is after the storm when everything is messed up.
how could anyone give this a thumbs down???
That's the job of a hater
33=69 32
50
23
142=141
someone who’s had serious therapy because of they family dying lol
Mike Theiss : I live in Graceville, Florida. Graceville is three miles south of the Florida/Alabama State line. I'm twenty miles south of Dothan, Alabama; and sixty miles north of Panama City, Florida. Hurricane Ivan almost blew my little town off the map. It blew down power lines. It uprooted massive oak trees and pecan trees. It spawned six tornadoes in Jackson County, where I live. It was rough, but no where near what Pensacola got. I know Warrington is still trying to recover from Ivan the Terrible. Remember what it did to the east bound lane of I-10, over Escambia Bay?
Had to highway around the bridge, I worked in Milton for a few months. Absolutely devastating!
Holy Crap!!! I am so glad I was not there to experience that. I would've been up all night not getting any sleep because I would be worried that my house was going to be completely destroyed.
storm
I was there I was 2 years old😂😂
I was seven years old when Ivan happened, living in the Myrtle Grove area. While I slept through a good bit of the storm, I was scared. My mom stated that she remembers the neighbors' roof being sent flying down the road. Luckily, family was staying either in my home or at the home of a family friend down the street. I didn't understand why I couldn't go to school like a day or two later until my mom told me that a couple trees fall on the school. I was also scared when I came home to the ceiling having caved in, and my mom, brother and I had to stay in a small apartment on our property until we got everything fixed. We were spending so much money on trying to repair everything that I slept on a bare mattress for several months until we were able to avoid a new bed frame for me. Nowadays, my family makes jokes about it to lighten up the situation despite how dangerous it was at the time
I worked night shift at West Florida Hospital. We ended up putting all the patients that was possible in the hallway except for a couple ,one of them would pass that night,rip,I took care of him in the dark, I had a patient pull out blood transfusion and couldn’t find it til the next day, it was complete madness but I felt safe in that building, People sheltered there for weeks afterward. One of my fellow nurses house in Perdido Key was destroyed, he lived in an RV in the parking lot for at least 6 months.
Debbie Davis : I had read that Ivan created waves over 105 feet high out in the Gulf. I was in the Navy and stationed at N.A.S. Pensacola from September, 1978 till I got out in December, 1982. I was in Pensacola, and living in Warrington when Fred hit in September, 1979. It was rough. My wife and I were living in these apartments on Bayou Grande, just across from the Navy base. You could see the front gate of N.A.S. from our front yard. The water almost came into our apartment. The threshold kept it out. My wife and I had to evacuate. Fortunately, she had some old college friends who lived off New Warrington Road. We stayed there for the night. The winds there got up to 100 mph. It was rough. But I know Ivan was a whole lot worse..
I knew what you meant, severeT. I can never bring myself to evacuate even though I live on Pensacola Bay. I wasn't at all crazy about Ivan coming knowing the potential destruction it could cause but was also very excited. I rationalized that Ivan was coming and there was absolutely nothing I can do about it so being the meteorlogical freak that I am, it was the second most exciting night of my life...of course, the New Orleans Saints winning the Superbowl is number one.
I love storm chasing so I can appreciate what you guys are doing.Good job.
PENSACOLA! My favorite place in Florida.
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Hot sure you should have risked your life for it, Mike, but thank you. As a person who has visited Pensacola for 60 years, I appreciate it. This takes me back to Charlie and Mobile.
It is a very good documentary film here.
I like my lady friends who like my commentary. :)
Incredible video Mike!! Excellent job. I remember trying to film Frances during the night time hours and it was next to impossible. I wish I had that flood light like you did.
It was bad in Pensacola but worse in Gulf Shores. The East end of the eye went over my head at 2:15 AM. I'll never forget it because a wave knocked my front door off right after and it shook the beach house so bad the clock fell off the wall and it was 2:15. I should've never rode out this storm down there.
I was drinking straight Vodka to stay sober by the time the eye passed over. I use to love watching hurricanes but Ivan changed how I felt after all the devastation and heartache. Some people lost everything they'd saved their whole lives for and couldn't rebuild because storm surge had never come so far and couldn't afford the insurance. I was on a bus with them touring the area with other former homeowners.
thanks for letting me enjoy Ivan from my house, thats crazy
This was such a massive and such an impressive storm I'm really surprised that there really isn't any actual footage of the storm except for so far this video.
Fantastic video, Ultimate Chase. Thank's for posting it.
I moved to Pensacola 2 days before Ivan hit. Was definitely a good Welcome to Florida experience!
Welcome to Pensacola ya'll😂 the beach really is beautiful😄
I am watching this because I want to relocate to Florida and I am researching. Can’t imagine living through this spoiled living in the north worse storm we ever had was sandy. Nowhere is perfect. If you have any advice please lmk. Looking into the clearwater area or ft lauderdale on the East coast.
I went through a few storms while I lived in Northwest Florida and every time it amazed me how things ended up working out. There were a lot of "blue roofs" in Pensacola in particular after Ivan for quite some time, basically tarped roofs and I know there were a lot of insurance issues related to whether or not houses were due to storm surge or the rain which many claims took a year or better to resolve. My opinion is to not let hurricanes stop you from moving where you want to move to. Yeah, they can be devastating, but most locals are somewhat used to it and they can even be a community bonding experience, as it was for me. Granted, I didn't lose any property as many have in these storms, so I can't speak from experience on that aspect, though I wouldn't let the risks of hurricanes deter you from moving to this beautiful state. Just watch out for Floridaman.
The sandblast is unlike anything I've ever seen before. It was so deep it could be mistaken as snow
just want to say I love your videos and keep them coming!! :)
You didn't get to see much in the darkness, but when daylight returned,
you certainly got plenty of damage to take footage of. That was one of
the nastier storms to blow up out of that part of the Gulf, and it hit at
one of the more dangerous coastlines for a storm surge.
You alive to tell the story.Its a scary exsperience I exsperienced a Thypoon in the Philippines.Most powerless moment in my life.This brings back horrifying memories
Visited and still visit this area to this day last time about a month ago. The effects of that storm are still visible. Asphalt is still very noticeably seen mixed with sand from Pensacola Beach all the way to Navarre. Loved visiting this area due to the storm and it's destruction... the road ended about 2 miles after the Portofino Island Resort towers. Walk into a world again without humans.
I wasn't in Pensacola for Ivan, I never realized how much it changed everything.....I'm in complete shock.
When Ivan hit, I was living in Mary Esther. We went east to Talahassee and, the following day, made our way back.
All our neighbors followed the storm north into Alabama. It took them 3 days to get home.
I still don't understand why they proceeded to go where the storm was heading.
dude really opened the door
I was 8, my 6’5” grandpa held the front door shut the whole time after the wind busted the knob off the door. My childhood died after this day.
Just imagine if tornadoes stayed on the ground equally as long as a hurricane.
Chitown Mytown official one and only channel Hurricanes frequently spawn tornadoes.
who’s watching this in 2019?
Yeah, M. I watch a lot of these old clips.
Had no date on it. I though it was NEW! LOL, I never watch TV so did not know if this was in effect.
KingoftheCatnap same, too bad world governments have destroyed the troposphere and all modern hurricanes are obviously made using #HAARP
I just saw it for the first time.
M • apparently the 2 of us🙄😂😂😂😂
Can't wait to relocate to Pensacola!!! Anything has to be better than Minnesota, the land of ice and snow!!!!
After the hurricane was passing towards the end all the sand everywhere it reminded me of Jeanne and Francis and 2004. Out here Hutchinson Island it looked just the same sand everywhere so much sand. Everything buried
So sad! Navarre is so Beautiful! Drove through there yesterday and it looks like it’s rebuilding pretty good hope everyone was okay and bounced back! ❤
That's hard to imagine when 65 miles north of us (in Brewton, Alabama) there was major damage.
This is actually scary...Ivan looks a lot scarier than other ones but maybe because it hit at night
+Mario Vargas well, the people who say that they can't send help because of storm conditions are the biggest assholes in the world!
tiffany carmony Amen to that Tiffany.
I was there. Man, it was a disaster.
Pensacola was like went 50 years back.
I remember watching this live, Be Safe Out There
Unpublished video, thanks for sharing, Mike! .. the wind noise from beyond the grave, really scary. Worth the effort for your unique scenes :D
I love Pensacola. Its my home. Florida is THE BEST PLACE TO LIVE ON EARTH.
Wow, I am so greatful to have seen this video! I am from Navarre Florida and at the time of Ivan my son had just turned 1 on the 2nd of Sept. I am so happy to have seen this because when I 1st met his father he lived on p'cola beach in the A framed house that you showed. When we went out to check out the damage however the A frame and the rest along with the neighbores house was completely gone! So it was nice to see! Kinda! Funny to think I did a lot of sneaking through those low windows!
My grandma lives in the condo this was filmed at. I've been there and it was so weird seeing all of those buildings/trees on the ground
I will never forget that Wednesday night Thursday morning, no sleep
I went through Ivan,Katrina,Irma,Charlie,and Andrew.I honestly think Irma was the worst!
How do you beat the government purposely ramming a barge into the levee and flooding an entire town?
Everyone on my street literally died after Katrina
Lucky! I went through Fay, Irene, and Sandy (don't remember the rest). Sandy was the worst for me.
How far inland do these storms normally go? I want to move to Pensacola is why I'm watching this and it looks like they get storms often...yikes
On top of high winds, storm surge, rain, alaways, always these storms spin off tornados & you don't see them coming. Ivan was said to spin off 142 tornados
The crazy thing about Ivan was the amount of tornadoes it produced. I was in Atmore, Al at the time and it was one heck of a storm.
I was in Pensacola for Ivan... a tree fell on top of our house and I threw my body over my sleeping 2yr old who had no idea what was going on, in case the tree came into the room. Lost power for about 5 days..... Gotta say the experience of the community coming together is something I won't forget. And the Red Cross trucks passing out cookies and juice in Whiting Field military housing....
It looks like when he opened the door to outside 2:31, there's was no balcony is was straight down. This is most likely because the stairwell was blown off by the extreme wind.
he shoulda jumped in,and surfed the surge inland,whoo hah!!
The sounds of the wind and rain as my house was destroyed… I will never forget.
I was only 3
I was in Escambia County during Ivan. Truly terrifying shit.
I was going to move to Pensacola this year,but changed my mind after 4 major hurricanes in Florida that year forced evacuations.I decided living a little inland was a better thing than evacuating 4 times lol.
Too bad it doesn't show the 90' wall of water that came into Escambia Bay and took several sections of the I-10 Bridge out! It was a VERY Long night and when we all woke up it looked like a war zone!
always live next to the water in hurricane town Debbiee!
Debbie Davis...the water wasn't 90' it was more like 30'.
Downed trees on 9 mile and debris for daaayyyysss.
I was 14 years old but I'll never forget that time in '04.
You guys are absolutely bonkers for what you do, but I love your videos. Stay safe on your chases!
I lived inland. When we walked out the house I didn’t recognize my own neighborhood.
Mike this is insanne stuff man unreal.Thanks for posting another great video. With the majority of the ENSO dynamic models forecasting Neutral ENSO by July and most of the eastern tropical atlantic warmer than average i.e; main development region the signs are there for an above average year. thanks again for uploading, adrian
wow the parts where he was inside a building you could use for a horror movie or a horror video games for sure
I go here every year and if you Kayak through a canal (with alligators) you can see a fishing boat in a tree from this. Not many people see this because we just found it.
Hey! I feel ripped off. The start of the video says "Never before seen video..". Yet the viewer count stands at 77,685. I want my money back!
1:30 pm our lights went out for 8 days.
Looks bad there, and it was probably even worse across the state line in Orange Beach
Holy shit! I had to research this because I'm thinking of moving to the Pensacola area. Here are some amazing pictures. coastal.er.usgs.gov/hurricanes/ivan/photos/florida.html
The LIMITED Audio does not do the storm Justice,.....it was 10x and So Horrible,.
I was in Panama City Beach staying at the Summit when Hurricane Ivan came. We got evacuated though two days before it made landfall. I’m glad we were sent home though, when I saw this video-it kooked very scary! And wasnt Ivan the hurricane that unleashed all the tornadoes?
Its so abstract to put myself in this conditions! The night shots fucking unbelievable how massive that wind was
I've been through Harvey, Irma, and Sandy
i remember coming home from evacuation seeing this. our house was the only one without any damage in our neighborhood.
Where did you live? I sat through this at Navy Point near the base. My area wasn't damaged.
Incredible footage.
You got to be crazy! I lived in Montgomery during this and it was very unsettling there so I can imagine how bad this was.
wow i remember being in sacred heart hospital during this. that was some scary sh*t
6:31 Was that at the Flounders Restaurant, opposite Pensacola Beach, on the pier?