Watching the ongoing drama down yonder on the Texas Gulf Coast leaves me with a dizzying mix of emotions.
* My family and I moved to Texas in 1984 and settled in Beaumont, the heart of the Golden Triangle. Hurricanes blow through the region.
Indeed, we endured a couple of major storms during our nearly 11 years on the Gulf Coast. One of them was Hurricane Bonnie, which wasn’t nearly as strong as Hurricane Harvey, but it did hit Beaumont directly; the other was Tropical Storm Allison, which has gotten some discussion from the weather experts reporting on the devastation being brought by Hurricane Harvey.
Allison didn’t reach hurricane status. It did, however, bringĀ a lot of rain in June 1989. It slogged over Beaumont on its way north; then it decided to back up and do it some more.
Hurricane Harvey, according to some of the TV weather talkers, is looking a bit like Allison as it meanders ever so slowly across the Gulf Coast region.
Harvey brings forth another bit of familiarity for yours truly.
* A couple of years ago, my wife and I pulled our fifth wheel south to Beaumont for a few days; then we traveled southwest toward Corpus Christi. We spent a few more nights at Goose Island State Park, in Rockport — which is where Hurricane Harvey made landfall late Friday.
I shudder to think what Goose Island SP looks like at this moment as Harvey continues to march its way to who knows where.
LocalĀ emergency management officials report at least one fatality in Rockport. Quite clearly, all of our hearts break for lives lost.
* And at yet another level, I caught up early this afternoon with a good friend who lives in Houston with his wife and their two young sons. As we spoke over the phone, our friends were getting pummeled by the deluge brought by Harvey.
He joked about the forecast of as much as 20 to 30 inches of rain. “If it rains like that we’re going to flood,” he said. “Hey, we’ve got a two-story house,” he said with the calmness I would expect from him.
* And that brings to mind a final thought: Is it my imagination, or do those affected most calmly by nature’s wrath seem the calmest of anyone? The media have been reporting with an urgency that at times seems to border on hysteria about Hurricane Harvey’s arrival on land and the destruction it’s bringing. I don’t doubt that the storm will do a lot of damage.
My friend said simply this: “I have less fear of the rain than I do of the wind.” He — and I presume his family as well — are ready for whatever comes.
Still, we are going to continue to worry about all of our friends — and everyone else as well — along the coast.
I must assume … yes. ?
Does anyone know if Steve Carleton and his family that live on Goose island survived the hurricane?