Humberto: The Day After


The Cheek fire station just outside Beaumont, Texas, took a beating after Hurricane Rita in September 2005.

One can hardly tell from riding around Beaumont, Texas, today that it was hit by a Category 1 hurricane in the early morning hours of the day before. That is likely not the case around the area where Humberto made landfall but the pictures and video I saw yesterday indicated we got a pretty good blow through here some 40 or so miles from the beach. I was, as I have mentioned, asleep through it all.

The lack of storm evidence was unlike when I returned to Beaumont a week after Hurricane Rita knocked the hell out the town and everything north and south for a hundred miles.

But the similarities of the two storms come together when you talk about inconvenience. Both storms caused some inconvenience. Several places I stopped at to grab lunch yesterday were not open. Today the Market Basket store on Phelan was awaiting a shipment of ice so I tried their store on 11th Street which had plenty.

Many are going through much more inconvenience than I am today. There are still tens of thousands of people without electricity. I am not one of them and my lights lit up just one day after returning from Rita evacuation. That is I suppose a benefit of living close to one of the city’s hospitals, the noisy helicopter ambulance not withstanding. I am sure the electric companies try to get the sick and injured some juice before many others. By contrast, my brother who lives up in the Pineywoods was without power for a month after Rita. Perhaps others won’t have to wait so long this time because of less damage. Convoys of electric power company trucks could be seen pouring into town yesterday and today so perhaps most people can watch the football games on Sunday.

As was the case with Rita there is really nothing for me to complain about. Rita was a lot more inconvenient but I didn’t lose anything in either storm nor did my relatives as far as I know. About half the carpet in my basement office downtown was soaked but luckily other people are paid — most likely not nearly enough — to deal with that.

Sometimes it takes a great force as that seen from nature to make you really appreciate your situation. In that respect, at least, hurricanes aren’t all bad.

It's raininggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggg!

Hurricane Humberto is heading toward us. “This is going to be a rainmaker,” says the guy on CBS News. Yeah, I think so. It is raining outside and the rain is getting more intense. It might be a good time to walk outside and soap myself. But that probably would not be cool with otras. La.

Live (sort of) blogging Humberto

It seems Humberto is the big weather story across the country this evening and the Weather Channel is making it sound as if this quick-forming tropical storm will wipe us here on the extreme Upper Texas Coast off the map. That is kind of hysterical actually because usually the Weather Channel acts as we here on the Gulf Texas and Louisiana border don’t exist. I mean, we live here in a metropolitan area even though it is a small metropolitan area.

None the less, (yes I spelled it that way — artistic license or rather driving without an artistic license)the major portion of Humberto seems to be heading right towards us here in the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange-Hardin County-Greater Kountze Metropolitan area.

Since I finally signed up for mobile broadband (albeit slow as Christmas)and since I don’t really have to go to work at my part-time job depending on the weather, I thought I would live blog Humberto.

Our most dependable weather forecasters at KFDM Channel 6, with Greg Bostwick watching things this evening, seem to think Humberto will make landfall in the early hours of the morning. There is even a remote chance it could make hurricane before it arrives but that’s pretty remote. Now, I am not going to stay up all night unless I can help it. But I might send out a dispatch or two for the two or three of you out there who regularly read EFD. Okay, I’m exaggerating, the one-or-two. Whatever.

By the way, I like the music the Weather Channel has playing during “Weather on the Eights, Pink Floyd maybe?

Humberto may rain on someone's picnic


A five-day cone of rain?

The National Hurricane Center just upgraded TD 9 to Tropical Storm Humberto. It is sitting just off the Upper Texas Coast and has been providing an abundance of rain here in Beaumont, Texas, today. We (Jefferson County) are (is) under (enough already!) a tropical storm warning here but that isn’t particularly as ominous as it sounds. Sez the hurricane predictors:

MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS HAVE INCREASED AND ARE NOW NEAR 45 MPH…75
KM/HR…WITH HIGHER GUSTS. SOME ADDITIONAL STRENGTHENING IS
POSSIBLE PRIOR TO LANDFALL … RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF 5 TO 10 INCHES ARE EXPECTED ALONG THE MIDDLE AND UPPER TEXAS COAST AND IN EXTREME SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA…WITH
ISOLATED MAXIMUM ACCUMULATIONS OF 15 INCHES POSSIBLE …

Okay, I must admit 15 inches of rain would definitely rain on someone’s picnic but if you are ignorant enough to have a picnic out in the middle of a tropical storm, you deserve some wet potato salad.

We (I) shall see what develops with Humberto, ¿dokey del okey?

Information sought on homicide


I don’t know if it does any good to post this on my site given the small audience reached by EFD but if it helps then it is worth it.

Galveston County authorities are seeking information on the murder of Bridgett Gearen. Police think the murder occurred in the early morning of July 15, 2007 at Crystal Beach, Texas, on the Bolivar Peninsula. Gearen was a secretary with a local law firm here in Beaumont. Scroll down a bit on the Galveston Crime Stoppers Web page for more information. I also believe that the reward has been increased from $15,000.