Welcome to FL Outdoor News, your go-to source for the latest trends in enhancing and extending backyard spaces in Florida!
Discover how these innovative solutions can transform your outdoor living area into a luxurious oasis. Whether you're dreaming of a stylish pergola, the convenience of motorized screens, looking for a little shade, or the elegance of high-end custom fencing, we’ve got you covered.
Now listen up, my flip-flop-wearing, frozen-drink-sippin’ friends of Latitude Margaritaville, Daytona — we need to have a chat. Not about cheeseburgers. Not about boats. Nope... we're talkin’ about that fancy motorized hurricane screen you had slapped on your lanai. The one you bragged about at the Tiki Tuesday social hour.
Because here’s the deal: If the hurricane screen is over 22 feet, and that screen was installed without a concrete footer, you might as well kiss it goodbye when the wind kicks up. I’ve seen beer coasters with better anchoring.
You might’ve been told by your installer or local screen neigbor screen guy, in that smooth-talking, sunburnt way:
“Naw, you don’t need all that. It is overkill. We do this all the time!”
Well guess what? So do insurance adjusters — and they don’t pay out when your screen blows off like a beach umbrella in a squall. If that bad boy is longer than 22 feet and ain’t bolted into a concrete footer, the Florida Building Code says you’re not compliant, and that wind-rated masterpiece becomes a flying fish in the breeze.
We're talking IBC §1604.8, Florida Product Approvals, NOAs, and all the other boring-but-very-important codes. The fine folks at Fenetex, Alutech, and yes, even MagnaTrack, all say the same thing: bolt that sucker into concrete, or don't come crying when it ends up in a palm tree.
Imagine this: You’re standing inside your paradise pad, sipping a sweet boat drink, watching the rain fall sideways. Then BAM! Your screen rips off like a toupee in a convertible. You scream. Your cat screams. Your margarita hits the floor.
And while the neighbors are still playing Jimmy’s greatest hits, your insurance company is playing a different tune:
“Claim denied. Improper installation.”
You’re left with a busted lanai, a soaked rug, and a suspicious HOA wondering how your screen ended up in Cheryl’s koi pond.
Look, we all love a good deal. But if someone told you “You don’t need a footer,” just to save a few coconuts, they weren’t doing you a favor. They were setting you up for a Category 5 letdown. And trust me — no one wants to be that guy in the Facebook group chat whose hurricane screen went rogue.
Call your installer and ask, “Did you put in a concrete footer? Can I see the permit and anchor schedule?”
If your screen spans over 22 feet, and they say “Nah, you’re good,” you’re probably not good.
Check your paperwork. If it doesn’t say “footer” or “engineered anchoring,” you might’ve bought a sail, not a screen.
Talk to your insurance agent now — not after the storm — and ask what’s covered if your screen fails.
Here’s the bottom line: We love the laid-back lifestyle. But when it comes to protecting your slice of paradise, don’t let sunshine and salt air cloud your judgment. Whether you're in a Conch Cottage or a beachy bungalow in Latitude Margaritaville, your hurricane screen needs to be more than just pretty — it needs to be properly anchored.
So before the next storm rolls in off the Atlantic, do yourself a favor:
Ask the hard question... Where’s my footer?
If you don’t get a straight answer, grab your flip-flops, your cell phone, and call someone who knows what they’re doing.
And if that someone’s Florida Living Outdoor? Well then, you just might weather the next storm with your screen still standing... and your margarita still in hand.
Now listen up, my flip-flop-wearing, frozen-drink-sippin’ friends of Latitude Margaritaville, Daytona — we need to have a chat. Not about cheeseburgers. Not about boats. Nope... we're talkin’ about that fancy motorized hurricane screen you had slapped on your lanai. The one you bragged about at the Tiki Tuesday social hour.
Because here’s the deal: If the hurricane screen is over 22 feet, and that screen was installed without a concrete footer, you might as well kiss it goodbye when the wind kicks up. I’ve seen beer coasters with better anchoring.
You might’ve been told by your installer or local screen neigbor screen guy, in that smooth-talking, sunburnt way:
“Naw, you don’t need all that. It is overkill. We do this all the time!”
Well guess what? So do insurance adjusters — and they don’t pay out when your screen blows off like a beach umbrella in a squall. If that bad boy is longer than 22 feet and ain’t bolted into a concrete footer, the Florida Building Code says you’re not compliant, and that wind-rated masterpiece becomes a flying fish in the breeze.
We're talking IBC §1604.8, Florida Product Approvals, NOAs, and all the other boring-but-very-important codes. The fine folks at Fenetex, Alutech, and yes, even MagnaTrack, all say the same thing: bolt that sucker into concrete, or don't come crying when it ends up in a palm tree.
Imagine this: You’re standing inside your paradise pad, sipping a sweet boat drink, watching the rain fall sideways. Then BAM! Your screen rips off like a toupee in a convertible. You scream. Your cat screams. Your margarita hits the floor.
And while the neighbors are still playing Jimmy’s greatest hits, your insurance company is playing a different tune:
“Claim denied. Improper installation.”
You’re left with a busted lanai, a soaked rug, and a suspicious HOA wondering how your screen ended up in Cheryl’s koi pond.
Look, we all love a good deal. But if someone told you “You don’t need a footer,” just to save a few coconuts, they weren’t doing you a favor. They were setting you up for a Category 5 letdown. And trust me — no one wants to be that guy in the Facebook group chat whose hurricane screen went rogue.
Call your installer and ask, “Did you put in a concrete footer? Can I see the permit and anchor schedule?”
If your screen spans over 22 feet, and they say “Nah, you’re good,” you’re probably not good.
Check your paperwork. If it doesn’t say “footer” or “engineered anchoring,” you might’ve bought a sail, not a screen.
Talk to your insurance agent now — not after the storm — and ask what’s covered if your screen fails.
Here’s the bottom line: We love the laid-back lifestyle. But when it comes to protecting your slice of paradise, don’t let sunshine and salt air cloud your judgment. Whether you're in a Conch Cottage or a beachy bungalow in Latitude Margaritaville, your hurricane screen needs to be more than just pretty — it needs to be properly anchored.
So before the next storm rolls in off the Atlantic, do yourself a favor:
Ask the hard question... Where’s my footer?
If you don’t get a straight answer, grab your flip-flops, your cell phone, and call someone who knows what they’re doing.
And if that someone’s Florida Living Outdoor? Well then, you just might weather the next storm with your screen still standing... and your margarita still in hand.
Work requiring DBPR licensure in partnership with CGC1532839
Deerfield Beach
Light House Point
Plantation
South West Ranches
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