She’s not that far away, and she’s very worried, as she also has stroke survivor husband Kaila
Live cams of storm chaser idiots driving through the area. One just got his windshield cracked.
You have to click on the youtube link under "video unavailable" to bring it up. There are four mini screens and they blip in and out.
I remember college students in Mississippi had a Hurricane Watch Party (was in Carla?) in the 70's all were killed.
Anne is right, for a long time I believed it. A great story. But now I think its just a myth. I spent a summer in Ocean Springs, on the Mississippi coast just a few years after Camille, still lots of visible damage. At that time most everyone believed the story, it was often retold.It was Camille in '69 but there are conflicting reports about a party in Richelieu Apartments. One survivor says there was, one says there wasn't. Guess they could both be telling the truth ...just not everyone in the complex was at a party.
The story about a hurricane party is true but not this version . I lived in Pascagoula, MS. for a year and a half. I went to Biloxi often and there was a foundation with stairs leading up to it. No building, just the foundation. I asked around why the foundation is there and what happened. I was told it used to be an office. I don't recall how many stories but the people in it decided to have a hurricane party and were all killed when the storm hit. I don't recall which hurricane but it was left there as a reminder to leave when hurricanes come.It was Camille in '69 but there are conflicting reports about a party in Richelieu Apartments. One survivor says there was, one says there wasn't. Guess they could both be telling the truth ...just not everyone in the complex was at a party.
https://www.nola.com/news/weather/article_acee3db1-ec9d-5fa6-bdc2-1ad983263903.html
What happens in Houma will depend on water levels and storm surge as much as anything. I don't know of a gauging station to follow in or close to Houma, the closest I can find are Dulac and Port Fourchon, those did not get real high and are now going down. Hopefully that's the case in Houma. The wind station I am watching only shows a peak gust of ~85 mph, with sustained winds all below 60 mph. I hope that is true also. If so Houma will have dodged a bullet as well. However its too soon to be sure.Houma is in the eye and that is bad for offshore oil production as Houma is heavily populated with such businesses. New Orleans dogged a bullitt.
Yes, I know what it is like, I grew up on the Gulf coast without air conditioning, went for 20+ years without. In 2005 we were without power for 2 months after Hurricane Dennis. As I get older it gets harder to sleep in that heat and humidity, and most younger people have never had to live without AC. It will be hard on many. However there are a lot of electrical repair crews and equipment on the way already, hopefully most power will be restored in a few days.Once the storm passes, it will take days, and some cases, weeks to fully restore the utilities. Can you imagine getting stuck in this heat and humidity for weeks?
The storm is no longer a hurricane, its a tropical storm moving into Mississippi, lots of rain and some wind yet to come as it moves north.
Thankyou Annie , i hope so, I’ve not heard from her yet today xShe'll be fine with this one, @charry , if she's in Jacksonville, Florida. Hurricane Ida is well to the west of her--landfall 500+ miles away--and will track north of her inland. Everyone in hurricane territory gets antsy this time of year on through October, and having a loved one with health issues heightens the anxiety.
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