UTMB website
UTMB on Flikr
A sign borrows from some customs closer to New Orleans
Evidently the sign did not refer to this item, though.
A sunken boat is raised from Bovine Bay via a barge crane
The ambulance deck parking at UTMB at night
This blog is initially designed to disseminate information and get feedback from residents of Galveston Island and the greater Galveston area. The continued publications will deal with the recovery and any good info pertinent to the issues dealt with.
A sign borrows from some customs closer to New Orleans
Evidently the sign did not refer to this item, though.
A sunken boat is raised from Bovine Bay via a barge crane
The ambulance deck parking at UTMB at night
A day frozen in time - evacuations were started after this day.
A tree may grow in Brooklyn, but fire ants grow in Texas.
A Cherry Tree rests on a power line in the East End Historic District. The flooding was 5-6 feet in this area and so will be the last to be energized. Homes in this area (and others) will be required to have their gas lines inspected and pressure tested by a licensed plumber before gas can be turned on as well.
When I opened up the toilet lid, the brush had evidently gotten inside...
The Mexican lizard had floated (swam?) from a nearby mantle and pushed the TV off of the cart, claiming its new place. Must've been eyeing that spot for a while, I guess.
OK. In my travels today I took a slightly longer trip and took the seawall back. Remember that it was at the top pre-storm (first video). The Seawall's Gulf face is concave to help "reflect" the waves and decrease water over the top onto the roadway. That shape helps to make some spectacular waves. Also, the way the waves came in (and just as a reminder this was before the storm came) they "travelled" down the Seawall. Also note the same potatohead that I referenced earlier holding onto a sign while the waves beat on him (I assume it was a him as testosterone lowers IQs sometimes).
Today the tide was out a little but there was roughly a normal day today (second and third videos). During / After the storm there were reports that the Seawall broke up. No such thing. I have travelled the entire length and there are pieces of asphalt out, but it is fine and none the worse for wear.
After the storm, taken yesterday. The cars reparked by Ike are still there. Many recovery trucks are present providing services including gutting and removal and dehumidification of areas.
This is a scan over the area now labelled as Bovine Bay. The ship anchored was the one ping ponging back and forth. Now it serves to keep the flotsam nearby with all of its associated "scents."
For today I will see if I can get some regular Seawall video on my doings of the day so that I can give you another comparison shot (the wave action was awesome). In the meantime enjoy this one with monuments of the original building of the seawall.
The serenity of the ocean is compelling sometimes, dangerous others. Remember you are not alone. Today you will be a little less alone here if your neighbors come back.
This was a shot at the tail end of the hurricane. The patients that were "stuck" in the hospital during the storm had just been flown out while the wind was still blowing and quite gusty. A few animals are seen out of their environment.
A ship, loose from its moorings drifts back and forth in bovine bay until it is secured. Note the water levels dropping a pinch.
Well, I am sorry for doing a double cliff hanger sorta deal, but I will get some recent shots up in the next blog. Today I put hasps and locks on the back door and garage door because all of the swollen wood doesn't allow the doors to close. The 6a-6p curfew is in effect for the next while. The water is to be boiled until further notice (i.e. no drinking, pets drinking, teethbrushing, and only very careful showering with it). The natch gas is not only off to the island, you cannot get it turned on unless you have a licensed plumber do a pressure test on your system and give the permitted test in to the city for the gas to be turned on. The main power poles have been cleared but all of the ones down the alleyways still have to be cleared (a cherry tree, rubber tree and some others are on the lines near me in the alleyway). Also, if your place was flooded with any significance, they are going to replace the electric meters before they reconnect your house. All of Tiki Island (900ish) fits that bill, and many on Galveston too (like mine).
The water got high enough and there was enough wind that there was a fire (not UTMB, but the marina nearby). The tall building next to the ED is our locked facility for Texas state inmates. Note the smoke obscuring the ED (and then blowing over the main hospital). The smoke smell was strong within the hospital, worse in the ED. Furthermore, we worked and relocated the "ED doors" to the front of the hospital since we worked for a period out of the SICU. The smell abated quickly and we went to the ED within 36 hours.
Look all around on the ground. See where the water is. Look to appreciate water levels. On my next blog I will give some better comparison shots for this side of the institution, anyway. I "heard" the quiet of the eye and woke up (the storm shutters stopped rattling). I think I remember saying to myself that the quiet is probably the eye and fell back asleep. It was the middle of the night so I couldn't get pics for y'all anyway. Sorry.
Damage typical of far too many intersections in Houston.
Trees falling down all over. One got this fence. Counting the rings of the trees on this property showed that the pines (almost all of the trees that fell on this property were pines) were 80-95 years old.
Piles of debris and treetrunks 6 foot high and more than 100 feet long left after partially cleaning up the above property.
The same property with the damage covered up temporarily (the stump showed that tree to be 80+ years old).
One houston home protects their freezers with a generator while...