Sentences with phrase «occasional hurricane»

While earthquakes and tornadoes are rare in Hingham, a high risk for blizzards, severe storms and even occasional hurricanes may increase your Hingham business property insurance rates.
The area is subject to tropical cyclones with consequent occasional hurricane force winds.
It might be misguided, because I'm comparing it to living in San Francisco, where everything is MEGA expensive, and some homes I owned in FL where there were super high landscaping / bug prevention / occasional hurricane costs, but I like not really having to worry about the exteriors or the roof and feel that that HOA is a small price to pay.
While earthquakes and tornadoes are rare in Maplewood, a high risk for blizzards, severe storms and even occasional hurricanes may increase your Maplewood business property insurance rates.
Other than the occasional hurricane, Florida living really is the best living.
This is TX... we're supposed to get the occasional hurricane... not tornados.
Sure, we have the occasional hurricane, but that just makes better waves to surf, right?
Providence homeowners must protect their dwellings against a smorgasbord of potential natural and manmade hazards, including inclement New England weather, the occasional hurricane, water damage, fire, and wind and hail.
Following bitter experience with recurrent fires and the occasional hurricanes (only two bad ones in thirty years) the people have been turning more and more to reinforced concrete structures.
The reef itself is in good health, but there are few hard coral species since their delicate structure is unable to withstand the occasional hurricane that blows through here.
Every year Isla loses parts of its shoreline because of erosion and the occasional hurricane.
These seasons do see the occasional hurricane.
Mexico does see the occasional hurricane between July and October, but they're pretty rare, and hotels are well prepared if a storm does occur.
For an interesting but meaningless factoid, the occasional hurricane that passes through the mid-Atlantic produces wind energy roughly equivalent to all the world's generation — but just try to capture it.
Situated on the East Coast, Maryland sees high and low temperatures, thunderstorms in the summer, snow in the winter, and the occasional hurricane.
Providence homeowners must protect their dwellings against a smorgasbord of potential natural and manmade hazards, including inclement New England weather, the occasional hurricane, water damage, fire, and wind and hail.
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