Laura!!

walkin jack

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I'm sending up special prayers for those of us in the path of this hurricane. My spot on the coast is not great but there are a lot of others in a LOT more serious danger.

I hope that all of you that are gonna run are already on the road and I hope that those that are going to ride it out have taken all the usual precautions. I've been at it since sun up and I now have my place as secure as I can make it. I have also worked with my neighbors on either side and helped them get stowed away, tied down or buried. On one side the husband is in advanced dementia and his wife is about 70 but in good shape. she and I and her son got her all secured.

On the other side of me the husband is severely handicaped. His wife is 40something and in great shape. Her and his dad and I got everything secured.

So now my stuff is good and I don't have to worry too much about my neighbors stuff coming through a window. :eek::D

The stores are as bad as they usually get. Lowes is makin' out like a bandit. The aisles are stacked with generators. they look pretty cheese to me but they are going out the door at a steady clip for 800 bux a pop. Heb planned ahead and had good stocks of ice, water and canned goods etc. So I think were supplied and ready to hunker down.

We have been working for months on this house getting it ready to sell. I really can't let myself think about what it might look like 72 hours from now.

We got caught in traffic running from Katrina. we went to Dallas, about 250 miles. It took us 9 hours to get there. My son waited until the next day and they drove to Waco about 225 miles and it took them 23 hours.

I would rather die in a cat-5 storm that go through that again. I understand the risk of staying but I feel it's more risky to drive it. I came close to shooting more that one aggressive driver that time and I know I would not have the control this time that I had then.

If we survive we will be gone by Thanksgiving. If not, well, either way this is my last hurricane. I went through Carla in the early 60s and all the ones since then. Been lucky too. Now I just need that luck to hold out for a couple of more months.

Good luck and God bless us all. y'all stay safe.
 
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walkin jack, from what they are showing so far, you all should fare pretty well with this one. It's looking to be another storm coming in at the LA/TX border again, like Rita did back in 05. The LA coast is gonna take a hell of a storm surge, depending on how bad this storm grows. Us folks that live around the New Iberia area will catch part of it, especially along the coastal areas with the surge. The local weather guy is telling us to expect 60-80 mph gusts from this girl and I hope that it doesn't mess up the power grid too bad locally. I do know that western LA and east TX are gonna get whacked pretty hard by this one though, so do some praying for them. I know that Cameron Parish already called for a mandatory evacuation this morning and that's good, because it's gonna get smashed, just like with Rita.
 
FYI
I have a Hurricane Shutter business. The best protection for the $$ are the Big Bertha Accordion's made by Eastern Metal Supply.
Few years back I did live in Texas. If I was there I would head to Fredericksburg
 
My daughter and her husband are in the Kingwood/Humble just north of Houston. They moved everything they could upstairs and left last night. I think they are more worried about the pines(some about 2' in dia.) around the house than water. Hoping neither will be a problem.
 
walkinjack. ...Feel the same you do about leaving....We left for Irma in 2017...Never again....Went thru Donna back in 1960 and a lot more since than including Andrew.... You sound like you're pretty much squared away and ready...worst part is losing power, especially in this heat.. Prayers sent for You and other Forum members in the path...Stay Safe, Stay alert in the aftermath.
 
every time a storm like this comes along everybody is buying generators. what did they do with the ones they bought in storms before this one? you would think that by this time everybody and their brother would have at least one or two.
 
My prayers are with those of you that live on the gulf coast or who have loved ones there. My first deployment with a DMAT team was to Cameron just after Rita ,it's amazing what mother nature can do.
 
Prayers sent for those in the path of this nasty storm. We're far enough west of this mess now, but we never turn a blind eye...
 
I'm worried. I have a friend in Bridge City that lost about everything with Rita. Looks like this one is coming right along the same path.

Even though he will be on the left side of the eye, it will be so close he will get smacked pretty hard. Say some prayers for your friend. I just texted a buddy of mine that lives in lower Vermilion Parish and he is going to ride this one out instead of evacuating. I am worried about the storm surge getting them there. According to Google Earth, his property is 7 feet above sea level and they are predicting storm surges in excess of 10 feet for that part of the state.
 
Was on one of the federal prep calls this afternoon... The storm surge sounds really scary.

Batten down, but have a backup plan. It will be differently with COVID this time.
 
walking jack, I'm with you. I was 20 hours from here to Dallas. That bus of old folks caught on fire just behind me. I wanted to go haul gas back down the line the next day but was too give out.
Stay safe folks!
 
We will see what we get. Downtown Houston only expects a few inches of rain and 20 mph winds. I hope to be close to that.
 
Robspeire—dumb question—how can any shelter protect you from 20 plus feet of water from the storm surge? Maybe they are water proof?

Indeed. The latest from the NHC on the subject of storm surge.

STORM SURGE: The combination of a dangerous storm surge and the tide will cause normally dry areas near the coast to be flooded by rising waters moving inland from the shoreline. The water could reach the following heights above ground somewhere in the indicated areas if the peak surge occurs at the time of high tide...

Johnson Bayou LA to Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge including Calcasieu Lake...15-20 ft

Sea Rim State Park TX to Johnson Bayou LA including Sabine Lake...10-15 ft

Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge to Intracoastal City LA...10-15 ft Intracoastal City LA to Morgan City including Vermilion Bay...8-12 ft

Port Bolivar TX to Sea Rim State Park...6-9 ft

Morgan City LA to Mouth of the Mississippi River...4-7 ft

Freeport TX to Port Bolivar including Galveston Bay...2-4 ft

Mouth of the Mississippi River to Ocean Springs MS including Lake Borgne...1-3 ft

Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Maurepas...1-3 ft

The deepest water will occur along the immediate coast near and to the right of the landfall location, where the surge will be accompanied by large and destructive waves.

Unsurvivable storm surge with large and destructive waves will cause catastrophic damage from Sea Rim State Park, Texas, to Intracoastal City, Louisiana, including Calcasieu and Sabine Lakes. This surge could penetrate up to 40 miles inland from the immediate coastline, and flood waters will not fully recede for several days after the storm.

Surge-related flooding depends on the relative timing of the surge and the tidal cycle, and can vary greatly over short distances. For information specific to your area, please see products issued by your local National Weather Service forecast office.

Ugly doesn't cover it.:( The repeated use of the word "unsurvivable" in multiple bulletins is chilling.
 
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She sounds like a real bea hatch. Get out if you can. Good luck and prayers.
 

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