Hurricane Rita


2/20/2006: 8:15 pm: RobertHurricane Katrina, Hurricane Rita

I’ve uploaded many photos to my website gallery and to this blog, but Hurricane Katrina has made me realize just how important it is to use my website to backup the photos on only one of my computers and the photo prints I have still yet to scan. Although Dreamhost’s servers are in earthquake country in Los Angeles, as least it’s far enough away from the San Francisco Bay area that if something happens in Oakland, my photos will be safe in L. A. Obviously, I also have backups of what is on the website, so I am protected if something happens down south.

When you ask most people what they would save if they had to leave their home in an emergency, photographs tend to be pretty high on the list. Though it’s always nice to have original prints, digital copies on a web server make for a pretty convenient backup. The important thing, though, is not too wait. Even though you have more advance warning with a hurricane, you’re almost certainly going to be too busy packing up and evacuating to spend a couple of hours preparing and uploading photos.

9/23/2005: 9:16 am: RobertHurricane Rita

I’m starting to get the feeling that I should have just created a category called “Hurricane” and then set up “Katrina” and “Rita” as sub-categories, because it looks like we are in for a future of a lot (bevy, gaggle, horde?) of major hurricanes hitting areas where I have a lot of friends and family.

My wife has several family members in the area southeast of Houston. Her father and step-mother have already evacuated most of the patients and workers (and some of their families) from the nursing home they own to College Station. Her step-mother wisely rented two school buses very early on, and also rented a horse trailer for moving supplies.

My wife’s brother siphoned gas out of every gas powered engine on his property and managed to head out early this morning with 38 gallons of gas. He left at 2:30 am from Angleton and managed to get to College Station by 5 am by driving on route 290. Although news reports said 290 was also completely backed up, he said he saw relatively little traffic at the time he drove. I know that at some point yesterday the Texas Highway Patrol started opening both sides of the highways for people who were evacuating. There was a ridiculous photo in the Oakland Tribune today showing a cop pulling over a driver for driving the wrong way on a completely deserted Interstate, while the other side of the road was a veritable parking lot. While you end up with some traffic issues if there were some vehicles trying to get back into Houston, I think those problems aren’t nearly as bad as having hundreds of cars left stranded on the highway because the cars ran out of gas.

This actually happened to my sister-in-law’s brother’s ex-wife. She was driving in a car behind his when she ran out of gas. Fortunately, she and their son were able to transfer to his car and keep going, but they had to leave her car behind.

9/2/2005: 12:00 am: RobertHurricane Katrina, Hurricane Rita

If you’re looking for someone who may have been in the path of Katrina or want to post info on someone who you know made it through okay, please check out the following registries.

Update 9/25: Here are a couple more sites to check out.