Of course (in western Tennessee) we did not suffer...
Memphis (a dense/mature oak forest with an above-ground power grid strung underneath it) had its predictable/routine power outages, but none here...and the strongest (rare) wind guts were probably only 50+ mph. I heard reports of locally higher ones, but only of interest (rather than consequence).
The thing that we ended up out here (at blokeplace - from the two-so-far hurricanes) was a whole bunch of pond water recovery (from this summer's drought). Its not full, but it's better than it was.
This far north, the routine threatening weather events are tornadoes (which tend to be really spooky phenomenons), but - by the time hurricanes arrive - they are merely rain events (and usually with no lightning).
Helene flooding: horrible/incomprehensible
Back when we lived in Memphis, we were at the "bottom" of a very conveniently located ("location-location-location") cove. it was so low that the ceiling of the second story was about level with the street that services the cove. Due to a lawsuit, a previous owner of that house ended up with an amazing underground/complex drainage system (which protects the house from flooding) but - regularly - I had to go out and and keep the intake (AND the out-go - on the adjacent school property) clean. Otherwise, we could have ended up with a flooded house anyway. (Early on, I learned that this was necessary, when water reached the top of the front door's stoop, but - luckily - didn't make it into the house.) I don't know if we'll ever move again, but this place (at least the buildings and road into here) is/are up on very high ground, and I won't be buying any more low-lying properties. There's a reason ($$$) why so many trailer parks are located in floodplains.
![Red :red:](./images/smilies/e21535.gif)