Posted on 09/12/2008 11:29:13 PM PDT by NautiNurse
The eyewall of Hurricane Ike crossed Galveston Island in the early hours of Saturday morning. Reports indicate as many as 20,000 residents of Galveston Island chose not to evacuate as storm surge engulfed the island. The Freeport Chief of Police reported as many as 2000 residents did not evacuate as flood waters swamped coastal communities. There are widespread reports of power outages and coastal flooding throughout the Texas/Louisiana region. The U.S. Coast Guard received hundreds of calls Friday afternoon to rescue people stranded by flood waters along the barrier islands and Galveston Bay communities.
Multiple fires broke out in the Greater Houston area fueled by strong winds. Fire fighting efforts were hampered by flood waters. Brennan's Restaurant, a landmark in Houston, burned to the ground. A 584-foot freighter crippled in the Gulf of Mexico and its crew of 22 survived the storm after The U.S. Coast Guard was forced to abort rescue efforts Friday afternoon due to foul weather
Gulf Coast wholesale gasoline prices jumped to nearly $5 a gallon over fears that water and wind damage could keep the facilities closed for days or longer. Oil companies had shut down 97.5 percent of production in the Gulf of Mexico by Friday morning and were battening down refineries and petrochemical plants in an area that accounts for one-fifth of U.S. refining capacity.
Exxon Mobil reported evacuating workers from its Gulf Coast offshore platforms and onshore facilities in the anticipated path of Ike, shutting down daily production of about 36,000 barrels of oil and 270 million cubic feet of gas..
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Buoy data: Western Gulf of Mexico
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Category | Wind Speed | Barometric Pressure | Storm Surge | Damage Potential |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tropical Depression |
< 39 mph < 34 kts |
Minimal | ||
Tropical Storm |
39 - 73 mph 34 - 63 kts |
Minimal | ||
Hurricane 1 (Weak) |
74 - 95 mph 64 - 82 kts |
28.94" or more 980.02 mb or more |
4.0' - 5.0' 1.2 m - 1.5 m |
Minimal damage to vegetation |
Hurricane 2 (Moderate) |
96 - 110 mph 83 - 95 kts |
28.50" - 28.93" 965.12 mb - 979.68 mb |
6.0' - 8.0' 1.8 m - 2.4 m |
Moderate damage to houses |
Hurricane 3 (Strong) |
111 - 130 mph 96 - 112 kts |
27.91" - 28.49" 945.14 mb - 964.78 mb |
9.0' - 12.0' 2.7 m - 3.7 m |
Extensive damage to small buildings |
Hurricane 4 (Very strong) |
131 - 155 mph 113 - 135 kts |
27.17" - 27.90" 920.08 mb - 944.80 mb |
13.0' - 18.0' 3.9 m - 5.5 m |
Extreme structural damage |
Hurricane 5 (Devastating) |
Greater than 155 mph Greater than 135 kts |
Less than 27.17" Less than 920.08 mb |
Greater than 18.0' Greater than 5.5m |
Catastrophic building failures possible |
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Previous Threads:
Hurricane Ike Live Thread III
Hurricane Ike Live Thread II
Hurricane Ike Live Thread I
TS Hanna, Hurricane Ike & TS Josephine [Other than that, the tropics are calm]
Tropical Storms Hanna, Ike and Josephine, TD Gustav (Other than that, the tropics are calm)
Even in September and May, it can still be pretty hot but you’re right, I don’t remember ever suffering. I guess we had our minds on other things back then :-)
In the house, we had two window units. We usually only ran the one at night on the east side of the house that cooled the bedrooms. I don’t remember many times having them both going.
From the overheads, you see two main debris vectors.
The main one, heavy construction debris, timbers, walls, sections of roof, down to bits and pieces, runs generally northwest. Specifically between 45 degrees and 63.5 degrees clockwise from the main road through Gilchrist. 290.1 through 310.3 degrees magnetic when transferred to a map.
Most failures were a product of surge damage, rather than wind. You see this because there’s a direct correlation between damage levels and elevation, the higher a location was above sea level, the lesser the damage to structures. It can go the other way, if the winds are strong enough and did from time to time in this storm, but the primary failure mode was from surge.
That indicates to me that the Gilchrist structures failed early in the storm, as the eyewall approached and pushed enough wave and water action ashore to exceed design and material limits.
Later in the storm, or after the storm it’s difficult to tell, you see the other main debris vector, fill transport. The sand was pushed southeast and left easily definable trails as that happened. Could have been the rear eyewall as the storm moved ashore, or if could have been up to days after the storm as surge impounded against the shore was released to course back over the barrier islands to the sea.
It’s an assumption, but a defensible one, that people were hunkered down in shelters and didn’t leave until the ocean ripped open ther structure and forced exit, IF anyone was still there by that time. Historical accounts cover this pretty well. Since the secondary debris vector involves small particulates, generally, and the primary debris vector holds true for larger and heavier debris, I expect to find any concentrations of bodies northwest of the damage areas, specifically on the shore east of Smith Point and south of Robinson Lake.
I also suspect the Robinson Gas Plant sustained heavy damage to a pipeline, storage facility or wellhead, and produced the “oil” slick visible in many of the images. That may still be leaking.
I’ll sure do it and let ya know.
bump for later
http://www.caller.com/news/2008/sep/16/tales_of_survival/
BOLIVAR PENINSULA — Many years from now, a small group of Hurricane Ike survivors probably still will be telling the story of how, on the night the storm flattened their island, they took sanctuary in a church — with a lion.
The full-grown lion was from a local zoo, and the owner was trying to drive to safety with the animal when he saw cars and trucks stranded in the rising floodwaters. He knew he and the lion were in trouble.
He headed for the church and was met by a group of residents who helped the lion wade inside, where they locked it in a sanctuary as the storm raged. The water crept up to their waists, and two-by-fours came floating through broken windows. But the lion was as calm as a kitten.
When daylight came, everyone was alive.
“They worked pretty well together, actually,” said the lion’s owner, Michael Ray Kujawa. “When you have to swim, the lion doesn’t care about eating nobody.”
Amid the destruction in places like Bolivar Peninsula and Galveston, where row upon row of houses were scoured from the landscape, seemingly impossible tales of survival have begun emerge. Whether through faith or fate, luck or resourcefulness, dozens of people who stayed behind made it out alive, and have harrowing stories to prove it.
As of Tuesday, the official death toll from Ike stood at 47. Only 17 were in Texas — and many of those were people killed by fires or generator fumes after the storm had passed. However, authorities held out the possibility that some victims were washed out to sea.
Among those who made it out alive was Kathi Norton, who put on a life jacket as the storm closed in on High Island, on the Bolivar Peninsula. She and her husband, Paul, knew the dangers of staying, and put their important documents, credit cards, money and cell phones into a plastic bag, and held on tight.
All too quickly, the floodwaters rose and the house started to break apart. Through the gaps, they saw refrigerators, lawn mowers and hot tubs floating past. The deck broke away next. Then the roof started to buckle.
“The whole floor was just opened out,” he said. Norton grabbed his wife and headed for an outdoor staircase, escaping in time only because a flagpole kept the house from crashing down for a few precious seconds. “I look up, the house is coming on us,” he said.
For hours, they sloshed around in 4-foot waves before finding themselves perched in a tree. They finally made their way onto someone’s motor home, which then started to sink. They were able to cling to rafters of a nearby structure and hang on until daybreak.
“We had to grab that staircase and float wherever it took us,” the 68-year-old retiree said.
Willis Turner decided to ride it out on his wooden boat next to his house on Crystal Beach, also on Bolivar Peninsula, but it nearly capsized and he was saved by a rope his wife tossed to him. The two held on inside a home that she said “vibrated like a guitar string.”
“It was like an atomic bomb going off. Right after the eye passed, whole houses came by us at 30 miles an hour — WHOLE HOUSES! — just floating right past,” Turner said. “It was unreal. Unreal.”
Turner and his wife awoke the next day to an island they no longer recognized. The first four rows of houses on the beach were washed into the sea. There were no more restaurants, no more gas stations, no more grocery stores. The neighborhood was gone.
In Galveston, Charlene Warner, 52, weathered the storm with her landlord and a neighbor in the apartment above her own.
“It felt like an earthquake — the rumbling and the rocking of the building,” she said, smoking outside a shelter in San Antonio. “Everyone was praying.”
“It was so terrible. All I could say was, ‘Lord, please don’t kill me. Forgive me for what I done,”’ Warner said, as a tear rolled down her cheek.
After the storm, she and neighbors waited for rescue, but no one came. The water receded, leaving a layer of muck filled with snakes. But with no water, no electricity and a shrinking supply of food, Warner decided to go for help, sliding her way across the goo a block and a half to the fire station.
Firefighters took her and neighbors to a spot where they could get on an evacuation bus. She arrived at a shelter in San Antonio with her purse stuffed full of personal documents and cigarettes, and one spare outfit that she washed and drip-dried on a railing Tuesday.
“I lost everything. What you see with me is all I have,” she said. “I never seen anything like that in my life. I’ll never ride out another storm.”
Cheryl Stanley said she and her husband, Tom, wanted to evacuate their Galveston apartment before the hurricane hit but couldn’t. Their son, Casey, has cerebral palsy, and the three live on the third floor. When they tried to leave, the elevators were turned off, and they couldn’t carry Casey down the stairs.
“It was horrible,” Cheryl said. “The building was shaking all night.”
A few hours into the storm, Casey said he didn’t feel safe in the bedroom, so they moved him to the living room. About three hours later, the ceiling in his bedroom collapsed.
“Thank God, we got Casey out of there,” his mother said.
After the storm passed, paramedics carried Casey downstairs. And neighbors carried the wheelchair.
At the Baptist church on Bolivar Island where the lion spent the night, Richard Jones, a shrimper, said he wasn’t afraid of the beast.
“That little old fella is just as tame as a kitten,” Jones said.
After the storm passed, the lion’s caretakers fed it pork roast to keep it happy.
I have relatives in RedRock (nearby?)
names Meno & Stull
Yea, Rumor has it I have power on my street. The doggy and I are heading home.
Think positive thoughts for us, we are leaving San Antonio and should be home in a 2ish, if we have power we’ll check in.
Be safe.
RS and The Psycho Dog
Thank you SO much for your photos. We have a family beach house on S Jacks Rd, 1st beach house on the right side at the beach entrance (Sea Shore). The Joy Sands motel is on the corner at 87. I’ve been unsuccessful in finding pictures of that area. Is there anyone who could help me or post some of that area? I spent 6 hrs looking on Google Earth with no luck!! HELP please! My prayers are with all the Bolivar folks.
Have a safe trip home and I’m praying you have good results upon your return.
Go back to google earth and bring up Galveston- then go here:
http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2008/09/googlenoaa_release_posthurricane_ik.html
Click on “Hurricane Ike Google Earth overlay”
..then you can type in the addresses you’re looking for and see what’s there now.
Be safe.
Prayers for ya.
I would add there are a good number of tormented folks who are anxious to know whether their loved ones survived. Their stress is palpable, and understandable.
Safe travels en route home. Please check in again when you can.
I agree and yes it is understandable but listening to the news over and over and from that predicting thousands dead is a bit out of whack. While it may be so, the media is only speculating from the most negative angle they can find. The authorities are doing the best they can down there. Unless we want more injuries and death, they need to proceed with the utmost of caution in searches.
That is the price people pay for staying, ALL coastal people know that if they’ve lived in the area more than a month. It’s a lot of territory to cover and if people are just sitting and worrying, they need to volunteer to help those in need instead of hounding and bashing the officials for answers that are not there yet. The media is doing enough negative output now to cover the entire population.
It only delays the efforts for unncessary parties to be down there or constantly telling them how they would do it. I wouldn’t want to be in their shoes, they’ve had a tough few days and a lot more to come. I doubt anyone will ever handle similar situations well enough to please even 10% of the population.
Doom spreads fast and those with delicate emotional stability could go over the edge. I’m just saying that we know nothing much yet so why assume the end of the island and the surrounding areas? I saw the same with Katrina. My sisters called me hysterical in the aftermath sobbing that NOLA was gone forever. Everyone said it was the end. Not even close. I just find the doom and gloom to be wasted time and energy. It is what it is and we will know soon enough.
Yowser! Amazing story. Good to hear the river has crested. Sorry to hear about your camera. Hang in there.
You are gutsy ... glad to hear
you’re weathering the challenges.
I thought the water would be
down yesterday. Have been
surprised by the continuing
problems.
Hang in there, and stay safe.
Is there really a tiger loose on Bolivar?
I have located the area you are asking about on the street map. I’ll see now if I can locate the exact noaa damage image for that area.
Since the area is Crystal Beach you may try looking on this website also.
Most of the pictures here are of the Crystal Beach area.
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