Hurricane Gustav (forcast models in first post) Be safe those in the path!

WTH!!!! :mad:

This is not the time to assume everyone on this board is so ignorant that we would actually stay put! We have all evacuated to other locations; a few of us are staying with family in the Baton Rouge area... and now we are worrying. So take your soap box somewhere else! :sad2:

Calm down. It's not worth it, :hug:
 
Hope everyone was able to leave if they needed to. It's getting kind of scary and now with it making landfall tonight (early Monday morning) I am sooooooo glad we got out. It only took us 12 hours to get to Houston :scared1: (we got caught in the Beaumont evacuations) but we are finally at my parents house, I have all my pictures and irreplacables with me, my kids are relieved, I found a kennel close to my parents' house for my dog that was able to board her tonight, and I have free grandparent childcare so my husband and I can finally SLEEP!!!!! My thoughts and prayers are with you all. Y'all stay safe!! :hug:
 
WTH!!!! :mad:

This is not the time to assume everyone on this board is so ignorant that we would actually stay put! We have all evacuated to other locations; a few of us are staying with family in the Baton Rouge area... and now we are worrying. So take your soap box somewhere else! :sad2:
:hug:

Remember the Dallas/Fort Worth area if anyone is reading and hasn't left yet. We have a lot of rooms here and I doubt that they're all full.
 
Its seems many people misunderstood my post from 2am. I guess I wasn't clear enough in what I said.

My post was meant for people in mandatory evactuation areas that decide to stay! Not directed to anyone here on the DIS since I haven't read the entire thread or to anyone who evacuated even if just a little bit north. So calm down. When I posted that, I had just come from nola.com & had just been reading about people staying & buying guns & ammo when I posted that. Also people staying in the lowest & hardest hit. THOSE are the people and I really wasn't expecting them to be here on the DIS.

If you've evacuated from areas you were told to leave, then you are safe.....and smart. And I wasn't on a soapbox. Sorry anyone took it that way.

Hoping storm moves further west (to a very unpopulated area somewhere) so NOLA gets less wind & surge thus less damage & everyone can return home soon. Good luck everyone. Not wishing the storm on anyone really, but just wishing for least amount of destruction as possible.

Also, you won't find my posts ever filled with hugs, kisses, wishes & pixie dust. Its not my style. Obviously, I want that for all of you. I guess the fact that it was missing made you all take my post as being directed at you & mean spirited. Not so. I'm just a realistic person who deals with facts...and not emotions. Sorry.
 

Nola.com also says that between 90 and 95% of coastal residents have evacuated and that's a lot.

There's always going to be diehards. When we lived along the Texas coast, some of the old-timers clearly remembered Carla but still wouldn't leave if threatened.

By the way, further west would take it to Texas. I guess there really is no good place to wish it to.
 
Another FYI & I'll leave since it seems I'm no longer wanted here. :guilty: My DH is not in the "rescue biz" as a few have called it. 25 yrs full time & part time Army National Guard in communications. The field that allowed the rescuers to do their jobs. And I wasn't speaking for him.

Good luck.
 
Back home and catching up....I see it looks like it will be a Cat 3 when it hits.
At least its not a 4 or 5 like the models sometimes showed.

I think everyone needs to take a breath. Emotions are high, people are worried. I dont think anyone here was really making a personal attack on anyone else.
 
Another FYI & I'll leave since it seems I'm no longer wanted here. :guilty: My DH is not in the "rescue biz" as a few have called it. 25 yrs full time & part time Army National Guard in communications. The field that allowed the rescuers to do their jobs. And I wasn't speaking for him.

Good luck.
I don't think it's you. Lots of people are edgy and upset and with good reason.
 
Its seems many people misunderstood my post from 2am. I guess I wasn't clear enough in what I said.

My post was meant for people in mandatory evactuation areas that decide to stay! Not directed to anyone here on the DIS since I haven't read the entire thread or to anyone who evacuated even if just a little bit north. So calm down. When I posted that, I had just come from nola.com & had just been reading about people staying & buying guns & ammo when I posted that. Also people staying in the lowest & hardest hit. THOSE are the people and I really wasn't expecting them to be here on the DIS.

If you've evacuated from areas you were told to leave, then you are safe.....and smart. And I wasn't on a soapbox. Sorry anyone took it that way.

Hoping storm moves further west (to a very unpopulated area somewhere) so NOLA gets less wind & surge thus less damage & everyone can return home soon. Good luck everyone. Not wishing the storm on anyone really, but just wishing for least amount of destruction as possible.

Also, you won't find my posts ever filled with hugs, kisses, wishes & pixie dust. Its not my style. Obviously, I want that for all of you. I guess the fact that it was missing made you all take my post as being directed at you & mean spirited. Not so. I'm just a realistic person who deals with facts...and not emotions. Sorry.
Thank you for clarifying. With several people just posting about being unsure about leaving (in non-mandatory areas) I just wasn't sure who you were posting to or if you realized they were in the non-mandatory areas.

If your husband is called upon for relief efforts I thank him and hope he stays safe :goodvibes

ETA: no reason to leave the thread. You clarified and that's that. Shutter and PG are right, emotions are high and I certainly understand your concern for your husband.
 
Another FYI & I'll leave since it seems I'm no longer wanted here. :guilty: .

I don't think its that.It was sort of the tone of your post:hug:

After Katrina there was a lot of hostility on the DIS towards those that stayed in N.O. I know of many folks who stayed-because it was always safe before.

There;s another thread here where people who stayed in areas that were "supposed" to leave below Houston -for Rita-explain why they stayed-gridlock where travel times were 6x normal times.
 
I don't think its that.It was sort of the tone of your post:hug:

After Katrina there was a lot of hostility on the DIS towards those that stayed in N.O. I know of many folks who stayed-because it was always safe before.

There;s another thread here where people who stayed in areas that were "supposed" to leave below Houston -for Rita-explain why they stayed-gridlock where travel times were 6x normal times.
I think sometimes Louisianians in general feel like they're in the line of fire of that hostility too (and not just here on the Dis). I'm sure I'm more defensive than I should be.
 
I don't know if this has been previously posted in this thread, but here's a great "weather blogger" that's been following the minute by minute development of this hurricane: http://pajamasmedia.com/weathernerd/

With Katrina, Loy was sounding the alarm bells before the pros were.

In his latest posts, it appears that there's a lot of reason for hope regarding NOLA. It looks like Gus isn't building up the head of steam people thought it would. Now they think it will hit as a "weak" Cat 3 or a "glorified" Cat 2 storm.
 
It looks like Gus isn't building up the head of steam people hearded it would. Now they think it will hit as a "weak" Cat 3 or a "glorified" Cat 2 storm.

Well there's a bit of sunshine in an otherwise bleak forecast! I guess if Gus is going to hit, and he is, let's hope he is as weak and puny as he possibly can be! :goodvibes

I hope those of you living down down in that area who needed to evacuate were all able to do so safely. And those of you not evacuating but riding it out in inland areas are safe and snug. You will all be in my prayers over the next several days.

I'm in CT, but my dh is down there in LA with his team helping the weakest of Louisiana's citizens (those in hospitals, nursing homes, homebound, needing medical assistance) get out. He's in the Lake Charles area now, expecting to get back to Alexandria tomorrow to ride out the storm. I'll be keeping dh and all of the public safety personnel in my prayers as well.

:grouphug:
 
So I am watching Jim Cantore and he is talking about the family with kids staying on the boat and not leaving.

He said the reason they are staying is because the kids asked them to.

I hope they survive:sad2:
 
So I am watching Jim Cantore and he is talking about the family with kids staying on the boat and not leaving.

He said the reason they are staying is because the kids asked them to.

I hope they survive:sad2:

WHAT!!!!!!???? Who is in charge in that family, the kids? I have to wonder what people think sometimes.

To everyone on here and in the areas that are going to be affected by this..stay safe.
 
The 11 PM update from Brendan Loy sounds encouraging... In fact, he's calling it a night:
The 11:00 PM EDT advisory is out. Gustav’s intensity appeared to have plateaued, and it’s expected to make landfall right around its current intensity — a borderline Category 2/3 hurricane — in the late morning or around noon, in the marshlands south of Houma. That city of 30,000, where The Weather Channel’s Jim Cantore is stationed, will take the brunt of the storm. Significant deviation from this track now appears unlikely (though small, last-minute “wobbles” are always possible).

New Orleans will most likely dodge a bullet, avoiding catastrophic flooding, unless the levees perform worse than expected. This will not be the “mother of all storms.” The media should, at this point, be ramping down the hype. Twenty-four hours ago, the hype was justified, but now, anyone who is still treating Gustav like some sort of unprecedented apocalypse is just ignoring the data. Thanks to the storm’s totally unexpected post-Cuba weakening and failure to intensify significantly over the Loop Current, this will be a run-of-the-mill, low-end Cat. 3 event, at worst. There will be death and destruction, yes, but certainly not on a “storm of the century” scale.

Anyway… I’m about to go to bed. I’ll try to post an update early in the morning, but I have plans tomorrow and I may not be able to blog again until midday — at which point Gustav will probably be making, or will have just made, landfall in Louisiana.
 
FYI for those who can not find hotel rooms- Mobile, Al has Red Cross shelters open. They are open to anyone, from any state. The last 4 on the list opened last, so they may have more room.

Theodore High School – 6201 Swedetown Road, Theodore - THIS SHELTER IS FULL
- Semmes Middle School – 4566 Ed George Road, Semmes
- Baker High School – 8901 Airport Blvd, Mobile
- Collins-Rhodes Elementary School - Medical Needs Shelter – 5110 St. Stephens Road, Eight Mile
- Causey Middle School - 2205 McFarland Road, Mobile
- Satsuma High School - 1 Gator Circle, Satsuma
- E.R. Dixon Elementary School - 4645 Bit and Spur Road, Mobile
- Denton Middle School - 3800 Pleasant Valley Road, Mobile


Beginning at 10 a.m. a Pet Friendly Shelter will open at Semmes Boys and Girls Club (the Old Semmes Middle School) located at 3810 Wulff Road, East in Semmes.
 
few more listings-

Other shelters may open as needed.

Baldwin County, AL
Baldwin County Coliseum - 19477 Fairground Road; Robertsdale, AL 36567
- A mass care / general population and medical needs shelter will open at 3:00p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 31
- Faulkner State Community College has been designated as a shelter.

Covington County, AL
The American Red Cross has opened two shelters for people from the Gulf Coast evacuating from Hurricane Gustav.
- Andalusia - US Hwy. 84 East/MLK Expressway
- Opp - US Hwy. 331 North

Jackson County, MS
The following shelters will open at 5:00PM on Sunday afternoon:
- East Central Community Center (Special Medical Needs-1 p.m.)- 4300 Hwy. 614
- East Central High School- 21700 Slider Rd. off Hwy. 614
- St. Martin East Elementary- 7508 Rose Farm Rd.
- Vancleave High School- 12412 Hwy. 57

Santa Rosa County, FL
The American Red Cross will open a shelter at 3 p.m. Sunday:
- Milton Community Center- 5629 Byrom Street for both special needs and the general population.
 
The 11 PM update from Brendan Loy sounds encouraging... In fact, he's calling it a night:

Sorry but IMO even a Cat 2 is still a major storm let alone a Cat 3.
NOTHING run of the mil with hurricanes.

Sorry but I would be following what the experience mets saying.
 














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