Skip navigation

In Naples, Wilma creates a 'Wizard of Oz' scene

120 mph winds whip through South Florida retirees' paradise

A man plays in the winds on Fifth Avenue in downtown Naples of Florida
Derek Padgett of Yorkshire, England, tests the wind force on Fifth Avenue in downtown Naples, Fla., as Hurricane Wilma blows through on Monday.
Rick Wilking / Reuters
Video: Hurricanes|  
  MORE
Nightly News
Is New Orleans ready for election?
March 18: The New Orleans mayoral race is one month away. With 20 candidates and thousands of voters spread out across the United States, many are wondering if their votes will count. NBC's Chip Reid reports.

Interactive
Follow the progress of past and present hurricanes
Multimedia: A look back at Katrina
Hurricane Katrina - One Year Later
Getty Images
Katrina then and now
View photographs comparing scenes during and immediately after Hurricane Katrina with recent photographs of the same locations.
The Dallas Morning News
Capturing catastrophe
MSNBC.com presents the Dallas Morning News’ Pulitzer Prize-winning photography of Hurricane Katrina, along with audio of the photographers’ descriptions of the images.
  Hurricane multimedia
Rising from Ruin
MSNBC.com follows two towns as they rebuild after Katrina. Follow their progress through on-going stories and citizen diaries.
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK
By Kerry Sanders
Correspondent
NBC News
updated 8:03 a.m. ET Oct. 27, 2005

Kerry Sanders
Correspondent

NAPLES, Fla. — Winds of up to 120 miles an hour whipped through this tiny Gulf Coast city as the eye wall of Wilma, Florida’s eighth hurricane in 15 months, made landfall early Monday morning. 

Palm fronds were ripped off palm trees and tiles were literally peeled from roofs, forming small — and dangerous — airborne missiles.

A “Welcome” mat that should have been at someone's front door flew by at about 25 feet up in the air. It looked like something out of the "Wizard of Oz."

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

And there was still more to come. After the eye passed through, the back side of the storm hit.

A path of desruction
Tree limbs, as well as entire trees, are down, causing extensive damage to power lines. Close to the waterfront, the predicted storm surge appeared to have arrived, leaving water up to five feet deep.

It's hard to tell the full extent of the destruction. Early assessments, though, show that though Wilma has caused damage, it is nothing like that seen in the wake of Katrina, or even in the aftermath of Rita. It was a Category 3 hurricane when it originally came through, but within two hours it had weakened into a Category 2 storm with winds of 110 miles per hour.

The real question is what happened a little further to the south — on exposed Marco Island, and specifically, down in Everglades City. 

It'll no doubt be difficult to reach Everglades City because Tamiami Trail, which links the town to Naples, is narrow and lined with trees, many of which are likely to have come down. We’ve attempted to make some phone calls, but so far we have been unsuccessful in contacting anyone.   

Everglades City, mostly a fishing village where people go out for stone crabs, has about 400 residents. It seems that most of the people there heard the warnings and evacuated, but there were some stubborn fishermen who said they weren’t going to leave.

As for Naples, it's unclear how many people left. Since the storm hit, the Collier County Emergency Operations Center has urged all residents to stay inside and to refrain from calling 911 unless there is a true emergency.

© 2009 msnbc.com  Reprints

Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Online College Courses
Boost your career with an online Degree. Pick from Leading Colleges!
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide