Katrina Trip Report

arminnie

<font color=blue>Tossed the butter kept the gin<br
Joined
Aug 22, 2003
Messages
9,064
I drove to New Orleans with my sister last Friday 11/4. About Jackson we started seeing trees that were uprooted.

The closer we got the more damage. In Tangipahoa Parrish (I55 after Hammond but before you hit I10) you could really see were the flood waters had been. I truly believe it was over the treetops in one place. It was very easy to tell from the brown dead plants where the water had been.

We came in on I10 from I55 (did not use the Causeway) - lots of blue tarps but you really can't tell how bad it is from the freeway. We drove into town past the Superdome and exited on St. Charles and went back uptown.

St. Charles has been cleaned up - almost all of the debris is gone. You rarely see a refrigerator out on the street. Many people came back 3 weeks ago so that's when so many were put out.

I am the luckiest person alive. I'd been told that 3 feet of my hardwoods had buckled where water had blown in from the sliding glass door. It is TWO BOARDS - that is all. The boards are not even really damaged they just popped up from expanding while wet.

I had a leak in the bathroom ceiling, but it is an area about 3 inches wide and can easily be repainted. No mold or mildew whatsoever. I found about 10-15 dead flies in my unit and maybe 2 live gnats.

I have also learned that butter does not rot. I had a pound of butter in my freezer. I had pictured that it would be melted and all over the place. I do not understand how it could have stayed in an open wrapper when totally melted but only about 2 T escaped and ran into a small ridge. It took about 2 minutes to clean it up.

Did you know that candy corn melts? I'd forgotten that I'd put a bag in the refrigerator before I left. It was one solid mass but was in a plastic bag so I just threw it away (as I did the butter!)

My a/c works, my refrigerator is fine, even the elevators and electric gates were working.

My church which is across the street from where I live has $3 million worth of damage. The Columns Hotel in the next block has major damage and won't open until 2006. My building is very ugly concrete and steel, but it is solid and sustained no damage.

Our personal evacuee (she stayed with my sister for 7 weeks) came over to help us unload the van. We went over to Magazine for dinner. Very self service - seat yourself, no menus just a buffet, and go up and pay when it is time to leave. It is normally a white tablecloth restaurant, but we were just happy to be there.

Quite a few people and cars were out and about. From St. Charles to the River (south) there is sporadic damage but virtually no flooding. In this area it was almost possible to believe that things were starting to get back to normal.

Our friend's roof was torn off as was her mother's next door on Prytania. They have lots of mildew, but not the furry mold. They have already had the roof replaced.

Saturday was a different story - we drove north on Napoleon and quickly saw the waterlines on the houses start to get higher and higher. More debris out by the street to be picked up as people tore out sheetrock, etc. We passed Memorial Hospital - the one that had several deaths. It's just a few blocks from me.

We drove up Carrolton to City Park so I could check on a friend's condo (she's almost 80 and is still in Dallas). The closer to the lake that we got the worse the damage. There's a public school across from her condo that looks awful, but unfortunately it looked almost that bad before the hurricane.

The St. Bernard projects are another block away - they are deserted and forlorn. Throughout the visit we went past two other projects. They are going to be torn down and replaced with multi-use housing. No one should have to live the way the project inhabitants did.

We made several trips to Home Depot, Wal*Mart and Sam's. They were all packed to the gills. It was interesting to see what what's up front in the stores - lots of bleach and cleaning supplies.

We bought beds at Sam's - very cheap and very firm (which I like). My sister decided that the airbed on the floor was more comfortable than the new bed. Did you know that you can get two twin mattresses and two box springs in the back of a '97 Honda Odyssey (much smaller than today's Ody)?

More than once we looked like the Beverly Hillbillies - especially with my Arkansas car tag.

We made a trip to Cafe Du Monde. The beignets and coffee were top notch. I often get beignets at one of the CDMs at the mall, but they are so much better in the Quarter.

Several places in the Quarter were open and many had signs saying they would be open in a few weeks.

There are help wanted signs everywhere. Minimum wage for all practical purposes is $10 an hour. Burger King is offering a $6000 bonus if you stay for a year.

I saw "apartment for rent" signs all over uptown - but I don't know if the landlords are raising the rents a lot or not.

I was pleasantly surprised after a few days to realize that there was no smell in the air. The streets in Uptown were very clean. I walked about a mile or so to a coffee shop one day and was amazed at the people who had re-landscaped already.

My sister has virtually no sense of smell after surgery a couple of years ago to correct a hole in her head where her spinal fluids were draining out her nose. She went with her friend to her small grocery store which had been flooded but not looted. She said that the smell was SO bad that it was all she could do not to gag and vomit - and as I said she can barely smell anything.

I did not go to the 9th Ward. You can only go there by bus. I felt that it would have been an intrusion on the suffering of the people who were going to look at their losses to ride on that bus as a lookyloo.

There is so much of the city and the surrounding areas that are in terrible shape. The French Quarter and Uptown are bruised, some of the other areas are badly broken, but the areas that we all saw on TV are just beyond comprehension.

Most of my friends are okay. One had just moved into their dream home 2 days before Katrina, and it was all ruined but they are financially able to handle it. It's the regular folks living from paycheck to paycheck like most of the population who are really hurting.

A man that worked at my condo for the past 7 years is still missing. We are all hoping that he got evacuated somewhere and is safe. Many people still do not know if loved ones and acquaintances are dead or alive.

I posted on another thread about a friend who was looted but actually had more stuff (electronics) left by the looters than they took. She didn't keep the stuff they left.

Violent crime is virtually non-existent in New Orleans right now. Still some random looting - particularly in areas where people can't move back yet.
I haven't been to Mardi Gras in years as I didn't like what it had become. I enjoyed Mardi Gras more when it was smaller. I am actually looking forward to being at Mardi Gras this year. It doesn't hurt that I live on a parade route and can watch from my balcony.

Please come back and visit New Orleans. People's lives will be in turmoil for sometime, but the tourist areas will be back to almost normal shortly. The city desperately needs the tourists to come back and spend money.
 
What a wonderful post! Welcome Home!

I'm in Tangipahoa Parish. We never evacuated, so we we've been here for the duration. We had extensive damage (wind and trees...no flooding), but we've made a lot of progress.

I agree with what you said about Mardi Gras. I think it will be interesting this year. I plan to go at least one day and I haven't been in years.

I still haven't made it down to NO. Since I don't really have any business down there, I don't think we should just be riding around looking. We've also been much too busy cleaning up our own mess. I think it would just break my heart to see a lot of it. I would probably break down and spend most of the day crying. As soon as I can, though, I'm going to get down there and do some shopping and have a spectacular meal. I definitely intend on supporting our city and seeing NO become the city it was always capable of being.
 
Are you staying home for good now? I am also looking forward to Mardi Gras this year. My husband has shunned Mardi Gras for a few years now because of the crowds and traffic and what the tourists have turned it into. You know what I mean....everyone believes Mardi Gras is only what they see on Bourbon Street. :rolleyes: But I've already warned him that this year no matter what, we will be there! We will be a part of bringing New Orleans back!
 
Great report! You know how many Louisianians want the city to "come back". I've heard countless people mentioning that N.O was their family's favorite weekend getaway-families that have season tickets to the Zoo , stay in the hotels and eat at the restaurants and stroll in the Quarter.
 

Thanks for that post and glad all is relatively well with your home!

I'm curious how my old high school fared. I believe it was at least first floor covered with water :(. (Ben Franklin).

I would love to visit NOLA again!
 
Fascinating report. Thanks so much. Your piece was very encouraging. I can't wait to spend a long weekend in NO with my DH soon. Have a beignet for me, too please.
BTW, how's the Garden District? Pasquale Manale's? Could go for some of their barbecue shrimp right now.
Thanks again! :flower:
 
I'm going back again tomorrow. I have to go back and forth between Arkansas and LA as I help take care of my dad (84) in Arkansas. My sister is in Arkansas,
but I can't make her do everything.

All in all the Garden District fared pretty well. Wind damage and then rain got in but that is still so much better than the flooding that stayed for days (weeks?).

Pasquale Manale's had flood damage, I'm not sure when they are re-opening but they will reopen. They are just a few blocks from Memorial Hospital (Baptist to us old timers) that had so many deaths.

Lisa - I knew you were smart and having gone to Ben Franklin just emphasizes it. Wow - that's one hard school to get into. I'll see if I can find out anything about it.
 
:grouphug:

I'm so happy that you fared so well! I'm also glad to see people are willing to return and rebuild the city. Keep us posted!

Anne
 
Lisa loves Pooh said:
Thanks for that post and glad all is relatively well with your home!

I'm curious how my old high school fared. I believe it was at least first floor covered with water :(. (Ben Franklin).

I would love to visit NOLA again!

I also am an alumni of Franklin (1971). I am on the Franklin community alumni email mailing list.

http://community.bfalumni.com

Latest email several weeks ago indicated the schooly is opening Jan 17th and enrollment is taking place now. Lots of family members of current students are dispersed, so no telling how many students will actually attend.
 
snappy said:
I also am an alumni of Franklin (1971). I am on the Franklin community alumni email mailing list.

http://community.bfalumni.com

Latest email several weeks ago indicated the schooly is opening Jan 17th and enrollment is taking place now. Lots of family members of current students are dispersed, so no telling how many students will actually attend.

That's good news on the reopening :goodvibes .

Thanks for the link!
 
arminnie said:
Lisa - I knew you were smart and having gone to Ben Franklin just emphasizes it. Wow - that's one hard school to get into. I'll see if I can find out anything about it.


Awww---that was sweet of you to say.

To be honest--I felt like a dummy while I was there--but I fared well in the 2 years I attended (the duration of my mom's assignment at the base in Algiers).
 


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