Tag Archives: Irene

Memories and Rain

The rain woke me at 1:30 this morning and I closed the windows and headed downstairs to check on Hurricane Irene.  We had a lot of lightning, rain and luckily little thunder as that tends to wake the dog, but she and my husband slept through Hurricane Ike.

Luckily my brother, who lives in NY, is OK.  He was out of the state at the time on business.  I’ve some other calls to make outside the main areas just to check in.

Today I read on Slate.com of a couple of ladies in North Carolina who left the trailer park as it was in a flood plain and holed up at the Baptist church.  People treated each other right nice at the church/shelter and local businesses donated food or sold it at sale prices.  That’s what I like to hear, folks taking care of each other in a time of need.

Why are tornado and hurricane alley trailer parks always on a flood plain?  Is this a national plan to eradicate the poor and elderly?

In Hurricane Rita, we left Houston and took the back roads 24 hours to do a five-hour trip to my husband’s parents house where we stayed ’til we made sure we had water and electricity.  Stopping for gas, no way, there were seven police cars with cops standing outside with M-16’s.  We finally got gas at the middle of the night in a small town, no attendant, just used a credit card and thanked the Lord we were able to continue on our way.

Ike was worse.  Mayor told us to stay put but all the skyscrapers across the Bayou had their windows blown out, everything was flooded, and there was no water or gasoline for a week.  No food (we had a hurricane kit) and my husband had to lug water up from the bayou or pool to flush the toilet.  FEMA screwed up big-time though we never used their services a lot of folks needed them more than us for food and water.

One time FEMA drove four trucks into a distribution point with starving and thirsty people who had been their for hours.  The containers had been loaded directly onto trucks with a major police escort.  Yet when they arrived, they said (even though the chain of custody was intact) they had to inventory every item in every truck before they could hand anything out.  Some gent I appreciate to this day and beyond put an end to that.

There was no food in Houston.  I walked through a dark grocery store and picked up stuff I’d never use otherwise, just because it was there.  No bread, peanut butter and all the freezer and frig cases were warm so no protein.

All of a sudden one of my favorite specialty shops was open.  Dealing in cash outside the store with cases of water.  I only bought one case to leave more for others.  They had fresh vegetables and even offered to go in and get us a bottle of wine.

I just checked out the Washington Post to see how a former city of mine was faring after the hurricane.  They have a virtual 9/11 wall that I thought of commenting on, but decided to come here instead.  I was overseas then, just trying to get home.  Met my husband two weeks after my return, just because people were talking, and we got to talking, then the next day he called me for a movie and we’ll be married nine years in January.

The Italian people were fantastic after 9/11.  I knew I’d be spending days in front of CNN International so actually got my photos developed and picked them up that day.  The clerk apologized.  Thousands of people held hands while the bells tolled in Piazza Signoria and I was there.  Mass was said at the church where the Consulate staff went weekly and I was there.  Every day I went to the airline office then the Consulate (the consulate is now heavily guarded, no street traffic and no walk-ins).  I still felt hope that the US would get through this, not the way it did with TSA feeling me up at the airport and government snooping into local phone calls and emails.

I didn’t lose anyone in Hurricanes Rita or Ike, or 9/11.  My heart goes out that people did, as with Irene where we lost nearly 20 fellow Americans.  These events touch many people and are remembered for years.

May the survivors remember the best things about family and friends, not do stupid things like trying to surf during a hurricane, and always say “I love you.”

Thanks for reading.  Peace, Dee

NEWS? Or NYews?

For over 24 hours our eastern coast has been battered by Hurricane Irene.  Nearly ten people are dead.  Over 2 million people have no power.

Yet between CNN and The Weather Channel, it’s all about NYC.  I watch and listen because I’ve family and friends in the greater NYC area and Canada.  But it’s all about NYC.

When we suffered through Hurricane Ike three years ago, which was a Cat 5 hurricane, the folks in NYC were upset because they couldn’t reach any of the Houston people to get projects done.  We had no phones, no electricity or water, no gasoline to get to the office.  Plus there was no power at the office and all the windows were blown out.  We had no water for a week.

FEMA brought snack food to people who needed meals, and when stationed in poor communities decided to only give water and food to those who drove up in cars, not the people in the neighborhood who couldn’t afford a car and walked to get their ration of two gallons of water.  FEMA was afraid the walkers might come back again for another share.  FEMA had three years after Katrina to clean up their act.  Ike was another black eye.  Hopefully they have their act in gear now because living without power or water really sucks.

We lived in a four-story loft in Houston at the time and two units had no damage at all, ours and another.  My husband and dog slept through an eight-hour Cat 3 hurricane.  I was up, even in front of the windows, writing.  The skyscrapers 1/4 miles away had all their windows blown out.  Streets were flooded.  It was 100 degrees outside and we sweated it out, going down to the bayou and pool to get water to flush the toilet.

Then we had to drain our tank of gasoline to drive to the airport and attend my mother at hospice while she died.  When we returned there was still no gasoline and others (we were close enough to City Hall to probably be on their generator) had no power for weeks.  People in the Heights all had power on one side of the street and ran extension cords to their neighbors on the opposite side.

My thoughts are with all those affected by this storm.  Down south, we have a hurricane kit and prepare to “hunker down” even when officials should have ordered us out and instead mandated us to stay.  We left for Hurricane Rita and lived through both Rita and Ike.

Please stay out of the polluted water on the streets and away from electric lines.  Concentrate on getting bottled water and edible food, not snacks if you have the choice.  Take care of the young and elderly first.  Don’t expect FEMA to help and don’t waste gas in line for hours to get whatever they give you.  Get out of town to the nearest unharmed grocery store, after visiting a gas station to fill up.  You’ll know to avoid the ones with grocery bags over the pumps.

Best of luck, our thoughts are with you.  Perhaps you’ll remember that next time you think of Cat 3 and 4 hurricanes in the South an inconvenience to your office routine.  We’re people too.  Wishing you well, Dee