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Not true. I've seen hurricanes turn many masonary block buildings into a pile of rubble like so many Leggos... in fact the more ridgid the structure the more likely it will be blown away.
With surviving hurricanes there are too many variables, each instance requires decisons based on many different factors... but if there is any chance your structure will get blown away or become flooded then the best thing is to depart inland to higher ground... and in the US the very last thing you need to take with you is food. Tying your food to a tree is something only a deranged mental midget would conjure up... because if you are going to remain on the premises then the best place for food (and everything else) is exactly where you normally keep it... there is far more chance you will become blown away or water well before anything happens to your fridge. Really, if remaining at home the only thing you need to concern yourself with is having a supply of water... both potable and for flushing toilets... at the first warning fill your bathtubs, buckets, and large cook pots. And have your vehicles fully gbutted. Like I said, food is the very last thing to be concerned with... there is nowhere in the US within a two hour drive of hurricane areas where one can't find all the food they could possibly want... anyone who can't last two hours without stuffing their face has much bigger problems than surviving a little wind. "Andy" is the second most common name for insbreastutionalized psychotics, Albert is first.
Sheldon