luvsJack
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20,355
I know Katrina was worse, but I rode out Camille in Biloxi in '69. We lived just off of Brodie Rd. about 1/4 mile from the bay on the East shore. The water went completely over the Bay bridge (that is, the old bridge).
Cantore and his crew were very lucky in one respect: the surge came in during the day. With Camille, the surge rose at about 1 am. With the power out there was no way to see it from the beach, as at the time there were very few structures on the beach side of US90. It also came VERY fast, much faster than Katrina. In the space of an hour it had swept through and receded again, in almost one big, overwhelming wave. By some incredible twist of fate, it stopped about 50 feet short of our house and started flowing back out again. (My Dad had turned on the spotlight on our boat, which was trailered in the carport, and he could see it rolling right up the street.
I barely remember Camille. But it was so traumatic. I remember when we would go to the coast afterwards and my Dad would point out places that went under water or that the water reached to. It was just very hard to imagine and scary to think about.
I did the same with Dd after Katrina or tried to. There was so much gone that I couldn’t remember where everything was.
I don’t think there was as much damage up here with Camille but I was only 6 so could just be I don’t remember. But Camille was the storm all others was compared to. I do remember the next one or next major one, I think was Fredrick and you could tell by bumper to bumper traffic up 49 that Camille had definitely taught a lesson about evacuating.

(With modern forecasting, honestly, I'll take hurricanes over those.)