A memory of Ike...I went to Palacios on assignment for the Press. My story idea was to chronicle how Texas ports were full of abandoned shrimp boats, left there by their captains for complicated reasons having to do with globalism.
Anyway, headed down to Palacios, checked into the Luther hotel, and spent a couple of days on the docks in high summer 2008, interviewing what few shrimpers were still pulling in and out of port at that time.
Back at the Luther, a 118-year-old hotel on the waterfront that still has a library, I was spending my nights reading local lore. I came across a volume that riveted me: Hurricane Carla: A Tribute to the News Media. When I wasn't out talking to shrimpers, I was up in my window-unit cooled room reading about Dan Rather, whose coverage of Carla revolutionized storm coverage, for better or worse, and lesser mortals of the Texas media. And it was amazing that at that time, Texans seemed to love them for the service they provided.
One day out on the docks I ran into a Vietnamese shrimper and while we were talking he mentioned trouble coming our way. "Ikey" he called it. What was Ikey I asked? A big hurricane, he told me. He thought it was coming toward Texas.
First I heard of it. At the time it was still way out by the Turks & Caicos, but the captain was sure it was headed right for Texas.
(Oh, and meanwhile, I had just turned in another story to the Press about the gang problem in Bacliff, Texas, right there on Galveston Bay.)
Since I was a member of the media, one deeply interested in the coast, to boot -- I felt it was my right to keep that book about Carla -- it was a cheap paperback, more of a pamphlet than a book -- and I took it back to Houston with me.
And I finished my reporting on the shrimp boat situation there and on Dickinson Bayou, at Hillman's fish camp, and headed back to Houston, anticipating having not one but two stories of Gulf Coast life and culture hitting the racks.
And then came Ikey, the exact same day my Bacliff gang story hit the racks, all over the coast. Months later, I found pulped versions of it in salt-and-sea crusted racks in Galveston, when I was covering Ike's aftermath.
And my shrimp boat story was ruined too -- the captains saw the storm as an opportunity to rid themselves of liabilities, and unmoored them from the docks where they were rotting away. Most of them ended up miles inland as flotsam. It was kind of a happy ending -- better there than ending up sinking in place in the bays, but dangit, that was a good story and I was about done with it.
And if you were ever wondering why Houston got schnockered by Ike, it was all my fault. I never should have stolen that book from the Luther Hotel library, and not only did I undo generations of goodwill toward the media, but I also temporarily destroyed Houston.
Here comes the story of the hurricane
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Some good Texas hurricane antecdotes on FB popping up right now by Texas Monthly feature editor and former Houston Press writer John Nova Lomax.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
FUCK ICE
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Jeff is the man, and you're way too soon to say he's a goner, he'll make it out with the best footage out of anyone.
Some of the footage I've seen so far is crazy, and that hurricane is gonna sit there and linger and dump flooding for days.
Some of the footage I've seen so far is crazy, and that hurricane is gonna sit there and linger and dump flooding for days.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Last time I drove to Corpus, back in the springtime, I remember seeing miles and miles of wind farms. Pretty majestic sight. Wonder how they all fared. I don't know much about wind power. Are they designed to sustain hurricane strength winds? If so, does that alleviate a little bit of the outage percentage on the grid?
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
It'd be pretty dumb to put wind farms on the gulf coast of texas that can't sustain hurricane force winds. So what I'm saying is I have no idea if they can or not.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
I'm conflicted here. We Texans are pretty dumb, but environmental engineers aren't.
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
your new avatar has really grown on me
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
All the best avatars do
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
what else grows on you?
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Downtown Houston and the areas directly bordering are
Right between two huge bands right now. We're all okay and about to walk down to the ice house.
Not looking too good for West Houston and the towns along US-59 right now. A bit of flooding along the Colorado and Brazos. Tornado touchdowns too.
Rockport and Aransas look BAD.
Right between two huge bands right now. We're all okay and about to walk down to the ice house.
Not looking too good for West Houston and the towns along US-59 right now. A bit of flooding along the Colorado and Brazos. Tornado touchdowns too.
Rockport and Aransas look BAD.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
(Don't Go Back to) Rockport
dimejinky99 wrote:I could destroy any ai chatbot you put in front of me. Easily.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Harvey just started dumping rain FAST around dusk yesterday and hasn't stopped. We've had one major flooding event for the last three years plus Allison in 2001, but this morning everything looks worse than all of that.
Hoping everyone stays safe. Orph, how you guys doing in Austin?
Hoping everyone stays safe. Orph, how you guys doing in Austin?
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
The city is mostly doing OK, I'm out in it at a rehearsal today. But the areas to the east and south are getting hit hard. Bastrop has major flooding after only recently recovering from wildfire damage a few years ago. Have to feel for them.washing machine wrote:Harvey just started dumping rain FAST around dusk yesterday and hasn't stopped. We've had one major flooding event for the last three years plus Allison in 2001, but this morning everything looks worse than all of that.
Hoping everyone stays safe. Orph, how you guys doing in Austin?
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Of course as I'm writing that a piece of material just got ripped off the roof of the building we're in. 
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
FUCK ICE
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
The picture on the right just breaks my heart. I'm reading now they were rescued, but still.McParadigm wrote:
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
So far the city officials and news outlets have done a fantastic job getting info to people and squashing rumors.
Rescue units have a boat shortage but a lot of citizens with kayaks are donating their boats and their time. Awesome to see.
Rescue units have a boat shortage but a lot of citizens with kayaks are donating their boats and their time. Awesome to see.
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
geez this thing is spawning tornadoes all over the place
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Re: Here comes the story of the hurricane
Nine trillion gallons of water.
WaPo wrote:The total rainfall from the storm is likely to tally up to a widespread 15 to 30 inches, with a few localized spots picking up 50 inches or more. Many textbooks have the 60-inch mark as a once-in-a-million-year recurrence interval, meaning that if any spots had that amount of rainfall, they would essentially be dealing with a once-in-a-million-year event.
(patriotic choking noises)