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([personal profile] pat Aug. 28th, 2005 08:09 pm)
Sometime yesterday, I checked on Katrina, which at that point was a low Cat 3. I filed into the "Significant Hurricane, Won't Hit Mom" file. (Some time ago, I figured out that obsessively following hurricanes was bad for my mental health.) After seeing all the flurry of activity on my friends list about the storm, I checked out the Weather Channel.

Wow. They're using the C-word.

I grew up in hurricane country. And in that area of country, there is always one storm that's spoken of with fear and trembling.

Camille.

The most intense storm to ever hit the U.S. My parents moved from Mississippi to Florida in January 1969, so we were not there for her. My sister, who was a nursing student at the University of Mississippi Medical School in Jackson, was. She heard the stories, saw the refugees from the storm. And the stories were horrible. People refusing to leave, hotels crumbling with people in them, apartments collapsing. Families being wiped out. Years later, when my family drove along the coast between Mobile and New Orleans, I still remember my Dad pointing out shells of buildings that had been destroyed.

And, at one point, they were saying Katrina was almost as intense (in barometric pressure, if not in windspeed). Dear God. Fortunately, they think she will weaken before she hits, but still...

I have a soft spot for New Orleans. I was born in Louisiana, I have a sister buried in the Metairie cemetery. My favorite comfort food is red beans and rice. I am sad that the city will probably be directly hit, and that there will loss of life. The city is too vulnerable to even a small hurricane, let alone a storm like this.

I don't have anyone directly on the coast -- my closest relatives are in Jackson, way inland. Depending upon the storm track once it heads inland, they could be looking at significant flooding risks. But I find myself still worrying about this storm. I am keeping everyone along the coast and in the city in my prayers.

From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com


I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but Camille was at 908mb, as of this afternoon Katrina was at 902mb.

And it's bigger.

TK
geekchick: (Default)

From: [personal profile] geekchick


as of this afternoon Katrina was at 902mb.

It was apparently back up to 908 as of about an hour and a half ago, according to weather.com.


From: [identity profile] tenacious-snail.livejournal.com


I spoke to my mom about a half hour ago. She is in Houston, and it took them 13 hours to drive there. She is, as you might guess, exhausted.

I, too, have that instinctive response in which no hurricaine could be as bad as Camille.

From: [identity profile] patgreene.livejournal.com

Re: What about


Camille was more powerful. The 1900 hurricane was a Category 4. It killed so many more people because there was less warning, and it hit a very densely populated barrier island (Galveston). Also, I don't know anyone who knows anyone personally who survived the 1900 hurricane, and very few who survived the 1935 Labor Day hurricane (Mom did, but she was quite young, and Sarasota was north of where the storm hit), but there are a lot of people around who survived Camille, or who know people who did, or who know people who died in Camille. In Florida, the second most mentioned horrible storm is Andrew, and I remember well the aftermath of Andrew.

From: [identity profile] tenacious-snail.livejournal.com

Re: What about


Camille was slightly before my second birthday, so its not something I remember, but it was still formative in my childhood.

From: [identity profile] patgreene.livejournal.com


I'm glad your mom is okay. I know how nerve-wracking waiting to hear about people can be, having gone through that last year with Mom and Charley, Frances, and Jeannie. And none of those were Cat 5. I'm concerned about how things play out later in the week for my family in Jackson, because my brother lives near a reservoir, and because they are in the possible tornado zone.

I just hope that there is not catastrophic levee failure, although that's certainly a possibility at this point.

I know the most important thing is that people are safe, I know that... but the thought of the Cafe du Monde under water upsets me.

From: [identity profile] tenacious-snail.livejournal.com


There was a levee failure on the Industrial Canal, leading to 5-6 feet of water in the Ninth Ward (which is already an impoverished area). From what I am hearing at this point, more of the flooding seems to be in areas that are older, poorer, and architecturally more interesting. I think recovery from this is going to take a *long* time.

From: [identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com


I haven't been paying attention to the news so it's only scanning the headlines/LJ this morning that I learned how very bad this storm is :( I'll be thinking of you and yours.

From: [identity profile] cyan-blue.livejournal.com


Hugs... it's awful to see a beloved city fall.
.

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