Remembering a Storm’s Fury

After
August 17 started out as a beau­ti­ful sum­mer day on the Mis­sis­sippi Gulf Coast.  But in just a few short hours, it turned into one of the worst days the Gulf Coast had ever seen.  Today marks the 40th anniver­sary of Hur­ri­cane Camille’s land­fall in Pass Chris­t­ian, Mis­sis­sippi.  Her twenty-four foot storm surge would wipe out nearly all busi­nesses, homes, his­tor­i­cal sites and any other struc­ture within sight of the beach.  It was nine years before I was born, but I will never for­get the sto­ries I was told of the hor­ror that hap­pened on that day. 

Here’s just one exam­ple of the destruc­tive power of Camille — the Riche­lieu Apart­ments before and after the storm:

Before

Before

After

After

 

To view more pho­tos of the destruc­tion, go here.

Images taken from Wikipedia

Weekend Edition for 9÷13÷08

Good morn­ing, all.  The wife and I were up at the crack of dawn this morn­ing (my nor­mal time of get­ting up — around 5:30 a.m.) to get ready for her Praxis II test.  We left the house around 6:30 this morn­ing and drove over to the Uni­ver­sity of South Alabama in Mobile.  After I dropped her off, I headed over to the Shell sta­tion across from cam­pus.  The price there was $3.799 per gal­lon, but lo and behold they were out of 87 octane.  Since I was run­ning on vapor, I had to go some­where close.

The next sta­tion down the street was a BP.  It was a quar­ter of a mile down the road, and the price was $3.899 per gal­lon!!  I sup­pose this is all the supply-demand thing since Hur­ri­cane Ike has shut down a good por­tion of the oil rigs off­shore of Texas and Louisiana as well as the refiner­ies in the Houston/Pasadena area.  Still, I couldn’t believe the jump in price in that short of a dis­tance.  But it’s bet­ter than most areas that are start­ing to see the price spike above $4.00 a gal­lon — some places even near­ing $5.00.  Crazy.

If you want some inter­est­ing read­ing this week­end, here’s some links of the news sto­ries that broke yes­ter­day and today.  They’re bro­ken down by area of interest.

U.S. News:

Hur­ri­cane Ike Slams into Hous­ton and Galveston

Fif­teen peo­ple killed when com­muter and freight trains col­lide in Los Angeles

Sci­ence and Technology:

Anti-Spam Law Over­turned; Spam­mer Walks

Google buys Korean blog­ging soft­ware com­pany — Oh Nos!

Pol­i­tics:

Obama Regrets Not Pick­ing Hillary — Biden even dissed him­self and lifted Hillary up.

Obama Back­ers Jit­tery, Obama starts get­ting des­per­ate and calls McCain ‘Out of Touch’

Sports:

Bran­don Webb hits 20 wins as the D’backs beat Reds 3–2.

Titans’ Vince Young was sui­ci­dal?

Alright, folks.  Enjoy the read­ing.  It’s time for me to head over to Barnes & Noble and see if I can find some PHP/MySQL/Wordpress books…Time to start devel­op­ing my hobby!  Have a good rest of your Sat­ur­day and a great Sunday!

POD Post #03 — Worst Case Scenario

0912081527-m-ike2.jpg

The storm surge is com­ing for Galve­ston.  May they be spared.

0912081527_M_ike2

(Image from Fox News)

Ike Heading for Texas

Message for Ike from Port Aransas Texas (Courtesy:  AP)
Message for Ike from Port Aransas Texas (Courtesy:  AP)

Mes­sage for Ike from Port Aransas Texas (Cour­tesy: AP)

It looks like, from the lat­est track this morn­ing, that any­one from Cor­pus Christi to Hous­ton could really feel the punch from Hur­ri­cane Ike.  As of 4 AM CDT this morn­ing, the winds were at 100 mph — a strong Cat­e­gory 2.  They are pre­dict­ing that Ike may become a Cat­e­gory 3, even a Cat­e­gory 4, by the time it makes landfall.

My thoughts and prayers are with my fel­low Amer­i­cans this morn­ing in Texas.  May Ike make land­fall in a rural area and not hit any major pop­u­lated area.  I hope no one has to go through what we here on the Mis­sis­sippi Gulf Coast had to endure dur­ing Kat­rina.  I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy — not even Osama bin Laden…Well, I might wish that on bid Laden.

Watching Gustav

video38097410baba.jpg

Con­tin­u­ing blog cov­er­age of Hur­ri­cane Gustav’s impacts on the Mis­sis­sippi Gulf Coast…

Update 2:05 p.m. — And another tor­nado warn­ing just south of us in Jack­son County.  This par­tic­u­lar cell is mov­ing at about 29 mph.  Take cover, people!

Update 1:30 p.m. — I just shot another video in our front yard of Hur­ri­cane Gustav’s feeder bands.  Not too dra­matic, but hope­fully it gives a sense of the rain and wind we’re get­ting (not as much as I thought it would be).

Update 12:25 p.m.  Here’s a video of a neigh­bor in Van­cleave of the effects of Gustav…Quite entertaining.

 

Update 12:10 p.m. Just got another tor­nado warn­ing for the Ocean Springs area.  This is our biggest threat right now.  So far no reports of dam­age from these.  I’ll keep you updated.

Update 11:35 p.m. Just got a Tor­nado warn­ing for east­ern Har­ri­son County and west­ern Jack­son County.  A tor­nado was spot­ted near Ocean Springs headed north­west at 48 mph.  Had a warn­ing ear­lier for north­west Jack­son Co. of a tor­nado head­ing north­west at 51 mph.

Good morn­ing, folks.  It’s 10:30 a.m. here on the Gulf Coast of Mis­sis­sippi and we’re cur­rently get­ting some heavy rain from Hur­ri­cane Gus­tav.  We haven’t lost power at all, which is great.  We have really been blessed so far with this storm — no heavy winds really or tor­na­does — and our prayers are with our neigh­bors in Louisiana.

Here’s a pic­ture I took yes­ter­day when the outer bands of Gus­tav were mov­ing into the area.

The outer bands of Hurricane Gustav

A little Gustav video

Here’s a video I just shot of the bands of Gus­tav mov­ing over our house.  Noth­ing like what Louisiana is get­ting, but I wanted to show every­one what we are experiencing.