It's hard to get my arms around the fact that five years ago I and my family felt secure and at peace in New Orleans. Sure a storm was out there, formed a few days before and was approaching the Gulf, but that had happened numerous times. Our youngest had just settled into her new shared house as a first year law student up river in Baton Rouge. It was hot, and we'd probably go to our camp in Waveland, MS as usual to escape the heat and humidity of the City for the weekend. It was just so ordinary for that time of year. Then, things started changing, the storm intensified rapidly and people were talking about evacuating to the north. Friday, in the afternoon a meeting was canceled at work because the storm had triggered the emergency plan, it was a plan--obviously not a plan for the event that occurred but contrary to popular belief there was a plan. A plan that assumed the levees were properly built and maintained.
Then the mayor finally concluded that although there was no clear authority for his action he would call for a mandatory evacuation. That didn't mean they put a gun to your back and marched everyone out of town, it basically was an order that would require you to stay off the streets until the order was lifted. So lots of people stayed, but some, the poor who had no other transportation sought transport out and got it. But many weren't able to get that bus, a lot of those were told that they couldn't bring their pets on board and were told to abandon their pets or they couldn't get on. The took their pets and went home. The City was deadly quiet and empty Sunday evening.
We stayed, our house was built in 1867 on the high ground. It had stood through all the hurricanes since it was built. I called a handy man who did work for me and we closed and nailed the shutters on the house--smart people back in those days, getting ready for the storm only took about an hour. We had food, ice, everything we'd need for the 3-5 days that it usually took to regain electricity. Our daughters were really upset, it was a Cat 5 storm, but I knew the house was high and that it would be safe. My wife & I stayed our older daughter went up to Baton Rouge and stayed with a friend who was a teacher there. I was more worried about them because of the experience many years before with Hurricane Andrew that turned and blasted Baton Rouge, big time. I didn't know if the places they were staying were as solidly built as our old barn.
We watched TV, checked the weather and turned in. Early the next morning, Monday, 5:30a, we still had power but the winds were whipping around rather smartly. We got the weather channel and saw that the eye was moving due north and the eastern edge would pass over the Mississippi Louisiana border, but we were on the "milder" western side of the storm. I was even more confident although I had to admit I thought the Waveland camp probably was going to be flooded.
The electricity failed about 6a or so, and the winds were at hurricane levels coming from the north. They would then turn from the west and die down by around 10a. Frankly, we didn't see much damage. A magnolia tree on the neighbor's property in back slowly went down in the west winds---I liked that, it was messy and dropped leaves in our fish pond.
We went out, and it didn't look bad, I was confident that we'd have electricity by Wednesday or Thursday, just not much damage. Then i went down the street the other way--OMG, it must have been a small twister and it creamed the steeple at the old, 1870 Methodist Church, totally in the street.
But, the sun was coming out and we started to hear bad things on the radio. WWL had pretty much lost all contact with the outside and was dependent on cell calls--calls from the eastern part of the City from people in their attics crying for help. Something had gone terribly wrong. Then there were reports of "something happening" at the 17th Street canal, but the reports said they were working on it and it would be okay soon. Those reports never stopped. My wife and the woman from next door took off on their bikes only to return about an hour later saying there was flooding about a mile from the house at Memorial (old Baptist) Hospital. Some rough looking people were riding around in cars looking things over. I let our Dobie, Mss Irma, bark her head off and she loved it. Those "tourists" knew where that big dog was. So Monday and Tuesday we cleaned up the yard, moved all the tree debris to the street and waited for normal life to commence again just as it always did. We had the neighbors for dinner Tuesday, candlelight, just like the days when the house was built. We sat in wicker chairs on the front porch after dinner finishing the wine--it was going to be a relaxing few days until things got back to normal. But they still hadn't fixed what we found out was a breach of some sort on the 17th St. Canal.
Wednesday morning, 9:30a, just sitting on the porch, my wife was cleaning up from the dinner. Then the words that started our life down a slope, "The water just stopped running!" Well, you can live w/o electricity, but you have to have water. So we decided to pack up and leave. Relatively easy departure, got to Baton Rouge and finally saw what the nation already knew--devastation. Looking at the reports on television was awful, it was something that we didn't even know was going on. Our world, without television is so small. We called friends in Austin, and moved over there. It would be 10 days before I was called back to work at my job in the City Attorney's office, but it wasn't in City Hall anymore--that was flooded. We were lucky, the flooding stopped several blocks from our house. And so a new phase in our life began, and like all the other citizens of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, our life is defined pre-Storm and post-Storm and will be forever after. I think everyone who was involved in this storm is thinking about where they were and what they were doing five years ago, and we'll remember 8/29 every year as a divide in our lives.
[img width= height= alt=Live Science looks at Hurricane Katrina's aftermath on the 5 year anniversary of the storm." width="400" border="1]http://www.livescience.com/images/hurricane-katrina-disaster-aftermath-facts.jpg[/img] Source
LiveScience.com, Science, Health & Technology News for Curious People.