I've learned that a lot of people who have lost everything in Helene and Milton don't have wind or flood insurance. I've been told I'm going to be forced to get flood insurance even though our house is on a ridge 28 feet above sea level. By the time flood waters reach our house there won't be any money left in the program.
I really hate insurance but I know the day I drop coverage (no mortgage so it's up to me to have it) a tornado will form across the street and lift our house up and carry it away. In 2005 I didn't file a claim for either storm because I chose a $13,000 deductible. I was going to file a claim for the pool enclosure but our next door neighbor had done that the year before. The screened enclosure company couldn't repair the broken section because the Florida building code changed after Andrew in 1992 and our house was built in 1988. They would have to tear the whole enclosure down and build a new screened enclosure to code. I balked at the $30,000 because the first $13,000 would come out of my pocket.
A local enclosure supply store was willing to sell me all the pieces (including the door) for me to make the repair myself. It would have been a piece of cake had I not needed a 24-foot square extrusion. Some very creative ratchet straps, twine and red rags picked up at HF on the way home helped immeasurably. Took me three days to transform that section from this...

...to this:

Full Disclosure: I installed the screening on the side walls and doors. A pack of Rhesus Monkeys installed the screening on the top. OK, they didn't look like monkeys but it's the only explanation for their ability to walk on the beams while pushing vinyl splines into said beams to secure the screening.
Milton didn't damage the screen enclosure but the sun has made the fiberglass screening quite delicate. Hopefully it will last until the screen monkeys are finished gouging the customers needing repairs from Milton.