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[RITA] Storm in the Atlantic to Watch for Texans

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Xenon, Sep 18, 2005.

  1. Xenon

    Xenon Contributing Member

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    Found this on another site. Figure some of you people need to read this...

    RITA'S AFTERMATH
    Hackberry: Population Zero
    The residents survived, but their close-knit Louisiana towns are a landscape of rubble.
    By Scott Gold
    Times Staff Writer

    September 26, 2005

    HACKBERRY, La. — Roger Thibodeaux gunned the engine but lowered his voice.

    "What we're doing here is illegal," he said. "But we need to know what's in there. We need to know what the rest of our lives are going to be like."

    Thibodeaux, 43, and Mike Daigle, 52 — two grizzled friends who live hard and work hard, one on a drilling rig, the other on a shrimp boat — had driven as close as they could Sunday afternoon to the region where Hurricane Rita cast a wall of water into Louisiana. Like thousands of others, they pleaded and cajoled, but authorities told them they could not go home.

    So Thibodeaux and Daigle fetched an aluminum skiff and dropped it off the side of the road, just beyond sight of a roadblock. Their voices hushed, they turned left over Choupain Road, then left again over the front yard of Judge Broussard's mama's house.

    Half an hour later, they made their way to Hackberry, a town of 1,700 people and one coffee shop in southwest Louisiana. They stepped onto the shore, plunging into dark, gooey mud and devastation.

    Remarkably, Rita appears to have killed no one in Louisiana. But in several small towns, the massive storm surge that followed the hurricane carted away something most locals thought was more enduring: their way of life.

    In Hackberry, all 750 homes were damaged, and most were destroyed. Fish, their cloudy eyes bulging toward the sun, are rotting in the mud. The storm seems to have picked up most houses and let loose their contents like a salt shaker — soggy checkbooks, potted orange trees, a child's bedpost with stickers reminding him to brush and floss.

    "It was a nice place to live," Daigle said as he waded down Channel Drive to the home where he and his wife of 32 years raised their two children.

    "Everybody kind of knew everybody here. On a Saturday night, we might go walking and meet people. One night one will cook, and another night somebody else. Sometimes somebody might get a sack or two of crawfish, and we'll all head over there and have a nice time. Now I don't see but about four houses that people are going to be able to even live in. How are they ever going to be able to rebuild?"

    Neighboring towns did even worse.

    To the southeast, Cameron — a port providing employment to hundreds in the area — is gone. A historic courthouse that was one of the few structures to survive Hurricane Audrey in 1957 sustained heavy damage.

    The tiny town of Holly Beach, a smattering of fish camps and cottages with a population of about 175, appears to have been leveled.

    Officials who flew over in helicopters said they would have no reason to think that a town had ever been there if it hadn't been for a few telephone poles jutting out of the water.

    "As far as we can tell, it's just flat," said Barry Badon, the area coordinator for the Cameron Parish Office of Emergency Preparedness. "This is ground zero of this storm, where the wind met the flooding."

    Badon lives in nearby Johnson's Bayou, southwest of Hackberry. His own home, he said, "is probably not there."

    Still, residents pressed against roadblocks from every direction Sunday, desperate to learn the fate of their homes. Sharon Felice, 58, roared up to a roadblock on Highway 27 about noon, demanding to be allowed to drive into Hackberry.

    Wearing a flowered housedress and slippers, she pleaded with a sheriff's deputy, who touched her on the arm and told her that the highway — the only way into and out of town — was washed out so badly that even some emergency vehicles had been unable to get through.

    "We're not many people, and we're nobodies, but we're a community," she said. "And by God, we want to know what's going on. My husband's grave is down there. My daddy's church — he was a preacher and he'll be 87 the 4th of October — I don't know what's happened to that. And my cats. I had to leave them. I know they're hungry."

    Tears streamed down her face.

    "I feel like, how do you say it, like an alien moving into a new country," she said as a new lake lapped on both sides of the highway and ate away at abandoned, crumbling farmhouses. "But this is my country, my home. Look at it."

    Some say it will never be the same, even in the areas that can be rebuilt.

    Daigle's son, Marty, 30, grew up assuming that he would be captain of a shrimp boat too. Then he saw how hard his father had to work, pulling long days alone on the 44-foot Southern Comfort, tossing out one 50-foot net at a time in the inland bayous and lakes of southern Louisiana.

    Marty, who graduated from Hackberry High School in 1994 among a class of 23, lives in Houston and works for a company that builds elevators.

    "It's sad," said the son, who had accompanied his father to check on their family home Sunday. "That's no easy life, and there are no young people getting into it. There's just one guy I grew up with who does a little fishing."

    Even if there are still some shrimp boats and some captains to pilot them in coming years, it is unlikely the industry will survive in this region, Mike Daigle said. Even if he has a good day of shrimping — that's about 2,500 pounds of shrimp — there is no place to sell it because the infrastructure of the ports and the markets appears to have been destroyed.

    "You've got to have some place to bring it in," he said. "There's nothing. There won't be anything down here for a while."

    Still, Daigle pledged to rebuild.

    "We haven't had anything like this for 50 years," he said. "You've got to figure it'll be another 50 years before it happens again. And I won't be around for that."

    So he went home Sunday.

    His first stop was his house, a 35-year-old former fish camp that he bought from a cousin more than 20 years ago.

    Fiddler crabs had taken up residence in the murky water on his street as he waded in, ducking under bowed power lines and checking the occasional mailbox to see whether there was any mail to bring out for anyone.

    "There she is," he said as he rounded a curve.

    A pile of storm debris teeming with fire ants covered the three steps, and he struggled to get to the door. Inside, the mud had crept in, and part of the ceiling had fallen in. But it was all there.

    The stuffed turtle and the toy truck belonging to Tate, his 2-year-old grandson. The picture of Tate taken last Christmas, wearing a Santa suit.

    The eight-point buck that Daigle shot a few years ago with a rifle, his wife's size 7 shoes, the bookshelf with "Where the Red Fern Grows" and "Facts About the Presidents."

    "I think we did OK," he said. "I'll get a water hose and drill a few holes in the floor, and I'll clean it out in no time."

    He opened the freezer, which had managed to keep the ice cream cold, if no longer frozen. It was a treat after a long, hot journey home, and he took a few spoonfuls.

    "I'm going to eat all the strawberries out of it and leave the rest for my wife," he said with a smile. "That's what she always does to me."

    Daigle initially thought the town had fared better than he had feared. But armed with a list of houses that neighbors wanted him to check on, he soon learned otherwise. Many are no longer where they used to be.

    "See that gray house?" he said. "That used to be on the other side of the road. And right over there, that house used to be on those blocks."

    He pointed to a spot about 60 feet away, where a forest of small, cinder block posts jutted out from a flooded field.

    "Now it's in that guy's backyard," he said.

    He stopped at what used to be an intersection. A house appeared to have imploded. Outside the home was a remnant of the family business, a refrigerator trailer painted with the words, "Seafood so fresh you have to slap it."

    "It's not good," he said. "Not good at all. I wouldn't wish this on nobody else."

    Thibodeaux was waiting for him back at the boat.

    "How'd you do?" Daigle asked him.

    "OK, I guess," Thibodeaux said. "Still standing."

    "Yep," Daigle said. "Me too."
     
  2. Blatz

    Blatz Contributing Member

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    When I left Wed. night they were saying that it could weaken and it still could miss Houston. Before I left I knew the worst case scenario because they told me. I also knew the best case scenario because they told me. They also told me everything in between the best and worst case scenarios. I like to think that I was not injured by the tree that feel in my living room because of the information the local and national media gave me.(mainly the local media, no cable)



    If that's being Punk'd I hope I get Punk'd the next time a Hurricane heads this way.
     
  3. HectikG81

    HectikG81 Member

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    Radar did better than most Houston Weathermen...

    [​IMG]
     
  4. DonnyMost

    DonnyMost be kind. be brave.
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    hey yall. i'm alive. beaumont and my neighborhood is pretty wrecked. my apartment in houston is now housing my entire family. pictures to come.
     
  5. slickvik69

    slickvik69 Contributing Member

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    Agreed. It's almost like the media got a kick out of playing with people. They influence a great amount of the public, and was a heavy part of putting Houston in a state of armageddon for a few days.
     
  6. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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    Chance you keep repeating that your point is to demonstrate that the media sensationalized the storm, but obviously your meaning on some level is to disparage people that decided to evacuate.
     
  7. Chance

    Chance Contributing Member

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    Then I can nip this thought at the bud.

    My problem lies solely with the media. As I mentioned I threw the lemmings line in there to stir the pot. Ironically, much like Neil Frank telling us that any move north and or east was a "wobble" and any move west or south was a "trend."
     
  8. dc rock

    dc rock Contributing Member

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    I never defended the media so I dont know what your point is. In fact, I saw a reporter for CNN do the exact same thing you mentioned above... acting as if he was shocked and had no idea where the hysteria came from. It's pretty clear the media caused the panic... But you can attack the news and government without calling regular people stupid just because they took them at their word.
     
  9. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Contributing Member

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    Its interesting to note how quickly attention about Hurricane Rita has died down compared to Hurricane Katrina on this forum even though Rita was as devestating as Katrina to many parts of East TX and LA.
     
  10. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    Well, the situation in NOLA was ongoing. When you have destroyed homes, you can rebuild. When your city is filled with water for two weeks, it is a developing story.
     
  11. mc mark

    mc mark Contributing Member

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    In case Houstonians need to evacuate again: Governor Perry has issued a new evacuation plan for Houston:

    Hispanics use I-10 West to San Antonio.
    Cajuns use I-10 East to Lafayette.
    Rednecks use 59 North to East Texas.
    Republicans fly Continental to Washington DC.
    Yankees and Democrats use 45 South to Galveston.
    Longhorns use 290 West to Austin.
    Aggies use Loop 610.


    :)
     
  12. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Contributing Member

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    But we have several Parishes that are filling up with water right now from Rita. I brought this up because I was watching Nightline last night and they made the point that not as much attention is being paid to the aftermath of Rita since it missed Houston but in some places the devestation is very bad.
     
  13. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    Yeah, that's true. The worst hit from Katrina actually happened in Mississippi, but everyone was focused on New Orleans. I think it is the "big city" factor that attracts the media.
     
  14. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    Solely responsible for what? The gridlock? People's fears? The hurricane?

    C'mon, Chance. It doesn't take rocket science to figure out that there were a number of contributing factors here. After seeing how devastating Katrina was, folks were scared. They feared for their lives and understandably so. So, they ran. The media didn't help matters by doing their normal job of sensationalizing things. The government didn't plan evacuations well and so there was gridlock. People didn't make smart choices in evacuations and decided to take 4 routes to get out of town.

    Also, there was a major hurricane off the coast that, at one point, had 175mph winds. Even the most conservative weather experts and damage experts have said that 140mph winds in central Houston could easily wipe out 30 percent of the homes and that isn't counting the outbreak of tornadoes we see with storms.

    The media isn't all to blame anymore than the government is or the evacuees are. It was a perfect storm of problems. But, given the fact that virtually everyone made it out safely, it could've been a lot worse.
     
  15. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Contributing Member

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    :D:D:D
     
  16. rockHEAD

    rockHEAD Contributing Member

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    [​IMG]

    Aggie Hurricane Preparations

    :p :D
     
  17. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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    I've heard from some well-placed sources that the Aggies are on to this trick and are demanding the Beltway 8 evacuation route...
     
  18. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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    Thought i'd drop this in this thread - this is actually surf from Katrina at Padre (Boca) - Rita was supposed to be even bigger...
    _____________

    [​IMG]

    Wave Size: (face) 10-15' building 15-25'

    Water Clarity: Sandy green

    Rip Current Index: Dangerous Rip Currents

    Seaweed: None

    Jellyfish: None

    Surf Conditions:

    Surf built quickly today, clean at Boca and a little wild on this side. Cove starting to show. Red tide is bad today, hopefully it will wash away. Our buoy was only 8' today, midgulf buoy maxing at 30-40'.

    Swell of the century....
    Giant surf with NW wind around 15. Cove should be all time. Do not even try to jump off the jetty to make it outside or you will die. Straight offshores and big clean surf but dropping quickly.
     
  19. apostolic3

    apostolic3 Member

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    It isn't just that. The amount of devastation from the failed levees far exceed the damage inflicted by the dirty side of Katrina and the total impact of Rita. 1/2 million people were displaced. There was the Superdowme fiasco with bus caravans to Houston after the slow federal response. There was looting. There were sniper shootings. The price tag for Katrina in New Orleans is estimated to be between $150-250 billion.

    The additional coverage given New Orleans is merited, IMO. And I'm no defender of the media's fairness and objectivity.
     
  20. Fegwu

    Fegwu Contributing Member

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    Absolutely wicked. :D

    So where exactly will the Argies be going to?

    Do you by any chance know what Gov. Perry plan to have Austin and Dallas folks do in terms of evacuation plan?
     

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