#36 Postby hurricanesurvivor » Fri Apr 21, 2006 5:10 pm
This is a condensed version of our experiences, concerning only the day before, during and after the storm:
We're about 40 miles northeast of New Orleans, and 20 miles north of the beach at Waveland. When the forecasters told us on Saturday, August 27 that New Orleans would be in the path of the storm, we began our usual hurricane ritual- putting away lawn furniture, tying down the trampoline and basketball goal, taking the garbage cans from the driveway, and stocking up on the necessary hurricane supplies. New Orleans was the target of this one, so we didn't expect too much out of it- maybe power out for a day or so, but nothing more. We went to bed Saturday night and the storm was only a cat 3- definitely one to ride out. "No biggie", as my 15-year-old son would say.
But everything had changed when we woke up on Sunday morning. The storm was now a major cat 5 hurricane, with winds of 175 mph and one of the largest eyes anyone had ever seen. New Orleans was now under a mandatory evacuation and the I-59 next to our town was a parking lot with vehicles trying to get out of the city- all lanes one-way out of New Orleans. We were told by friends that it had taken them 12 hours to get to Jackson- a trip which normally takes only 2 hours. We knew it was too late to evacuate. Being in a car on the interstate in the middle of a cat 5 hurricane is definitely not a good idea. So we decided to stay and make the best of it. We had only enough plywood on hand to board up a few windows, so we decided to take refuge in my home office- a room with 10" thick solid brick walls on 3 sides, protected on the weak wall by another house very near it so the wind couldn't blow anything into the two small windows there. We moved as much of the furniture out as we could, and moved some partitions in front of the south-facing door- our only "weak" spot in the room. We also boarded that door on the outside with plywood.
By midnight on Sunday we were all worn out from hurricane preparations, so we took a nap, even though the wind was starting to gust strongly at that point. Around 3 am my older daughter woke me up- the power had gone out. My computer's UPS battery was still functioning so I was able to see the radar online and learn that the storm was expected to move a little more east of the original forecasted track, sparing New Orleans and possibly us, depending on how far east it would turn. As the battery on the UPS went out, I saw the eye about to make landfall. That was the last we knew of where the storm was headed. My battery-operated radio would only pick up one station- WWL out of New Orleans. So we sat in the light of candles, listening as the winds slowly increased around us, and learning from the radio that the storm was going to spare New Orleans.
As morning broke, my son and I went outside to film a little with the video camera, but were soon driven inside by the force of the wind and rain. Every few minutes we'd hear a loud "boom" as a tree or a large branch hit the ground somewhere near us. Once the eye crept past New Orleans, WWL stopped broadcasting about where the storm was headed and only told about damage to the city. That left us with a huge problem- we didn't know where the storm was going. If it turned east as predicted, we'd get high winds but we'd stay out of the eyewall. But if it didn't, and kept on a northerly path, we'd be in trouble.
Around 10am, we all jumped as we heard several loud claps of booming thunder, then our eyes opened in amazement because the roar didn't lessen as thunder normally does- it kept getting louder and louder, until the ground was literally trembling under our feet. My heart fell as I realized we were probably surrounded by tornadoes. I knew then we had made a terrible decision in staying put. We all scrambled to the strongest brick wall, sitting on the floor in a circle holding hands and praying, as our house began to shake violently. This went on for at least an hour, as we heard objects hitting the house and the doors sucking in and out. I have never been so afraid in my entire life.
And then it all suddenly stopped. The rumble faded away and the house stopped shaking. We all got up and slowly went outside, and saw our neighbors starting to come out as well. We all looked shell-shocked. Our street looked entirely different. The dogwood trees which had lined our driveway were all uprooted. The tall pine in our front yard had snapped midways and the top was upended in the yard. Nearly every tree in our yard was either uprooted or snapped- but they had all fallen miraculously away from the house- in all directions! We found our ridge vent mangled under a tree in our backyard, so my husband hauled the ladder and was about to get on the roof to put some tarp down, when the wind suddenly began picking up--- from the opposite direction! We all looked at each other and realized the storm hadn't turned east as we had hoped. We were in the eye! As we looked to our south, my heart dropped into my stomach as we saw a wall of black clouds approaching. I nearly fell apart-- I knew our house couldn't take those winds again. We all ran inside and got back down on the floor, bracing ourselves for another onslaught and praying our house would hold up.
But miraculously, the winds in the southern part of the eyewall were much weaker. Within a couple of hours there was only a gusty breeze and drizzly rain outside. We still had phone service, so we called and checked in with our family out of state to let them know we were okay. We couldn't get in touch with my parents, who live just down the road, but we also couldn't drive to check on them as we were completely blocked in by downed trees and power poles.
That night was fairly pleasant, even without air conditioning, as there was still a good breeze blowing. But when we woke the next morning, the heat and crushing humidity were already starting to take a toll on us. By this time we had no phone service at all, no running water, no power and not nearly enough food and water to make it very long. We couldn't flush the toilet, we couldn't bathe. But as we surveyed the damage around us, we knew we were very fortunate. No trees had landed on our house and were were all safe. Our home could be repaired and life would go on as usual- or so we thought at the time.
By the afternoon I was beginning to get very worried about my parents, and decided to see if I could drive out of the neighborhood. Neighbors had been out early, cutting a path through the downed trees, but since they couldn't move the power poles, we had to drive underneath poles hanging at all angles across the road. The first power line we drove over terrified me, but after that it was no big deal. Power was out all over so there was no danger, and you couldn't drive ten feet down the road without driving over a power line. They were draped like spaghetti over everything. It took over an hour to get to my parent's house, which is only a couple of miles from my own. They live in a mobile home, but had taken refuge next door at my grandmother's house. I fully expected to see their trailer demolished, but miraculously, it was untouched. However, my grandmother's house had a tree fall on the carport. Thankfully, they were all unhurt and just hot and miserable. The radio station out of New Orleans reported very little damage to the city, as they had been on the west side of the storm, the 'good' side in a hurricane. They all celebrated as they had dodged the bullet once again.
As we drove back home, we were worried to see the river near our house rising. It was already up over one of the entrances to our neighborhood. I had to back-track and drive all around town to get to the other entrance. We hadn't thought about the water coming up, and we were starting to get concerned. If the water came up over the other entrance, we'd be trapped in the neighborhood with very little food and water. But I had learned from my parents, who had a generator and were able to watch the tv, that all the roads leading out of town were closed. All the bridges and overpasses were either completely demolished or badly damaged, and the roads were totally clogged by fallen trees. And the worst news of all: the entire gulf coast of Mississippi was gone. Wiped out. I think we were in shock the rest of the day. Seeing the damage around your city was one thing, but knowing the entire bottom third of the state was devastated was overwhelming. At one point, it was reported that 85% of the entire state of Mississippi was without power. And the scariest part of all was knowing that, without the roads, no help could get to us any time soon. We were on our own, at least for the time being.
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