Carol Walterson Stroud didn't evacuate Key West because she's a nervous wreck driving alone, and her husband - "a hard-headed conch" - wouldn't leave. So she was in a borrowed apartment in the senior centre where her husband Tim works, with their granddaughter Sierra Costello, and dog Rocky. Her daughter, Breanna Vaughn, refused to leave her animals in her home a few blocks away. "I'm afraid. Tonight, I'm sweating. Tonight, I'm scared to death."
Many poor people had few options. People with more resources didn't want to stay in crowded shelters, or risk driving hundreds of kilometres north. "If you drive to Atlanta or Tallahassee, you're risking running out of gas and being in your car in a Category four hurricane," said Michel Polette, who lives in Miami Beach.
Mobile home parks were subject to mandatory evacuation orders but even there, people stayed put.
"I'm not going anywhere," said Laurie Mastropaolo, 56, at the Treasure Village Mobile Home Park in St Petersburg. She said she weathered Sandy on Long Island."I'm not going to get on the road with the crazy people."
- AP