The girl evacuating alone after her shift as a waitress was a student story, told to me as true, except it was a story about the Rita evacuation. She took the back roads and made it to Huntsville nearly a half a day before her Mom and Dad did via 288 and I45. She also had her ten-year-old sister riding with her. That was possibly a better story than I wrote, but it didn't fit the IKE frame.
The man who cut down a tree, dropping it across a trunk line, cutting off power to a whole neighborhood after it had been restored is a story that went around via email in LJ after Ike. I suspect it is an urban legend.
Muffy's story is whole cloth, though I know a few non-mechanically inclined guys who struggled comically with generators after the hurricane.
We called them Daddy's Girls, but named the segments . . .
My Dad is Nuts
RONNYE My Dad is nuts.
BRANDY My Dad is nuts.
MUFFY My Dad is nuts.
RONNYE So I get home after school Tuesday and he’s already there, got off from work early. He’s running around saying “There’s a storm in the gulf and it’s headed our way.” I’ve never seen him moving so fast. He’s got a pile of plywood and he’s boarding everything up. I get to hand him nails and carry his hammer.
BRANDY When I got home, my Dad had the car packed. And the engine running. Says we’re getting out early, not getting stuck on the road like Rita. It took us twenty-four hours to get to my aunt’s in Huntsville. This time he had this map marked with a special route that goes around all the evacuation routes. He said that was the real problem last time. He joined the Lemmings on the road and got jammed up. He says get in the car. I tell him I have to work. He says the restaurant is probably already closed. I tell him I at least oughtta call. He says okay, so I call. They’re open and want me to come in if I can. I tell my Dad they really need me because they’re shorthanded. So we argue.
MUFFY My Dad is unloading a generator when I get home. I don’t know where he got it, but mom keeps calling it her new couch. He says we’re really going to need it when we get back, after the storm—says the power may be out for weeks, but we’ll be okay because he got this generator.
RONNYE Dad boards up everything, the house, the tool shed, the doghouse, and the garage door windows. I reminded him to leave the front door open so we could get in and out of the house. I thought he’d be mad—he doesn’t have much of a sense of humor when he gets like this--but he just said he wished he had some sandbags, and left the board to go over the front door on the porch.
BRANDY We argue with my Mom and sister sitting in the running car until finally he says I can work my shift if I promise to get right in my car and drive to Huntsville as soon as I get off work. He gets out another map and marks the route for me. It looks like spaghetti. He takes my mom and sister and drives off. I go to work. After work, I call him on my cell. He says they’re some-place-I-never-heard-of “making good time.” I hear Mom say they’re lost again and why doesn’t he just stop and ask directions. He says he has his map and knows exactly where they are, then whispers into the phone, telling me to "be careful of the Needville cutoff," then loudly he says to "be sure and follow the route he marked on the map, and to call him every hour."
RONNYE I asked him why sandbags and he took me inside and made me look at this computerized map that showed Angleton as coastal city if a 21-foot storm surge hit Freeport. He played it over for me, twice—10-foot surge and Surfside is gone, 18-foot surge and Freeport is under water, a 21-foot surge and Lake Jackson is . . . well a lake. He wanted to go to Surfside and see how many sandbags we could make with beach sand and mom’s pillowcases. I told him it was illegal to take sand from the beach, Mom would probably hide all the pillowcases if she knew what he was planning, and that this was a particularly crazy time to go to Surfside, so instead he made us haul most of the furniture upstairs.
BRANDY After I talk to Dad, I toss his spaghetti map in the back seat, pull out on 288 and drive straight to Huntsville, no traffic, no problem. I arrived at my aunt’s an hour before they did.
RONNYE Wednesday morning we load the car and go to Waco to stay with Grandma & Grandpa.
MUFFY We don’t leave until Friday morning. Mom made him check us into a really nice hotel in Dallas. She said if she couldn’t have a new couch, she was at least going wait out the hurricane in a nice spa.
* * *
MUFFY The hotel was nice. I wish we had stayed longer. Saturday afternoon, after the storm passed through Lake Jackson my Dad was in a big hurry to get back home. Driving down from Dallas, we ended up in the edge of what was left of Ike. It was pretty bad, rain, wind, even a little hail. The power was out when we got home. I think dad was glad.
BRANDY We drive back from Huntsville Tuesday the way I went up, straight down 288. I never did find out what took them so long going up. They don’t talk about it. I never did tell Dad I drove up 288 and there was no traffic. I don’t think he wanted to talk about that either. When we got home, there was no power
RONNYE When we get back to our boarded up house there is no power, no air conditioning, the weather is cool outside but the house is hot, muggy, and we just lay around like dead people, hot sweaty dead people. It’s like all our energy was used up getting ready for the storm and after the storm, we lay around in a boarded up house unable to move.
MUFFY When we got back, he went straight to the garage and started fiddling with the generator. He had his nose buried in a book trying to start it, trying to hook it up to the house. It took three hours. Finally, we heard it start and we had power. Everything came on. Then it sputtered and stopped . . . but we still had power. The power came on for our whole end of the street. We were some of the first in Lake Jackson to have our power restored. We didn’t need the generator.
RONNYE We eventually started taking down the boards so we could open the windows. Taking down boards, picking up branches. When the air came on it was like my dad got his second wind. He was out picking up the yard, hauling limbs to the curb. He got so into it he fixed the patio door and the back light—stuff mom has been after him to fix for months.
BRANDY My sister and I had to pick up tree limbs and pile them at the curb. She pretended we were building a fort. I got a call to go in. With everybody, eating out because they had no power, the restaurant really was shorthanded and needed me.
MUFFY That generator didn’t do us much good. I wished he’d gotten something that would pick up limbs and branches from the yard. Maybe he can trade it in on a new couch.
RONNYE Everything was okay--I mean I thought Dad would end up repainting the house or something--but everything was okay until he decided the big tree in our back yard needed to be cut down because “it would probably fall in the next storm.” He borrowed our neighbor’s chain saw and started on the tree, but something went wrong. Instead of falling across our back yard, the tree crashed through the power line behind our house, taking out the power for the whole neighborhood.
He went in the house right after it happened—made me sneak the borrowed chainsaw back into our neighbor’s garage. I think he’s hiding out, trying to pretend the tree fell over because of the storm.
I guess that’s kind of true.