It will be a short one this time muchachos. But I’m posting this for a couple of reasons. I’ve had numerous enquiries about how Miss Dorothy and I fared in Hurricane Sally, which came ashore just to the east of us. Also, I’ve vowed that come what may I will post at least one new AstroBlog article every month. And I was hoping that might usually be two.
You didn’t get two in September for a very good reason: it was resolutely cloudy in the weeks leading
up to Hurricane Sally—September is the big month of hurricane season, after all—and it has been
resolutely cloudy since. It is threatening to clear up this week, no
doubt due to the presence of a waxing Moon. Moon or no, I need to get a
telescope into the backyard for a photo-shoot to accompany my next Sky &
Telescope Test Report, so I may actually grab a camera and give M13 a try. As those of you who've hung out here for a while know, I try to image the grand Great Globular once a year no matter what.
Anyhow, what happened during the storm? Well, a couple of days before Sally hit, I had a premonition: this
was gonna be another Elena. A what? Hurricane Elena struck Gautier,
Mississippi back in 1985. Unk, a young, freshly-minted engineer with his first
real job happened to be living in that little coastal town at the time. But
that wasn’t the kicker.
The kicker was that my wife at the time and I had gone to
bed Saturday night after hearing a weather report that assured us Elena would
hit Apalachicola, Florida. Being late risers on Sunday who liked to read the
New York Times over much coffee sans TV or radio, we didn’t give the storm any thought in the
morning. Till the phone rang. It was one of my colleagues asking what the wife
and I were gonna do. I replied, "I think she’s still reading the magazine
section; I’m making more coffee.”
“No, I mean about the storm.”
“What storm? Elena? Why should we have to do anything?”
“You haven’t heard? Turn on the freaking TV. She’s going to come
ashore at Gautier and go right over our heads!”
And so she did. And quite an experience it was; it’s the
only time I’ve experienced the passage of the eye of a hurricane. Frightening? Yes. Strangely exhilarating? Also, "yes."
I had that ineffable feeling that Sally was gonna be a repeat, so to speak,
and it became clear that was precisely what would happen. Sally’s track
got pushed to the east past Louisiana, past Mississippi, and right to Alabama.
Ever since Elena, I’ve taken these things seriously even
when I’m told I’ve got nothing to worry about. Most of our preparations
were already complete by the time Sally drew a bead on the Alabama Gulf Coast. I’d made a run on Publix for bottled water and other stuff (pop-tarts, peanut butter, bacon; the usual survival supplies), and
the 25kw whole house generator we’d had installed last year had coincidentally just been serviced and was ready to go. Only thing left to do was to
tip-over my amateur radio HF vertical antenna. It has a tilt base for just such
eventualities, so that was easy.
The evening before landfall was eerily calm, though looking up
and seeing clouds literally dashing across the sky foretold there was something
bad in the Gulf headed our way. I went to bed about midnight just as the bands
of rain began to come thick and fast and winds began to gust up to 30 – 40
mph. I slept well but for a couple of
times when I was awakened by the power going out, the generator coming on, and
power being automatically transferred. But I was able to fall back asleep each time. Until about 5 am or somewhat before when it really began to blow
and the power went off and stayed off.
Gotta tell y’all: your old Uncle really squealed about the price
of the generator and its switchgear and their installation, but I sure was happy
to have it on this morning. The winds howled—did they ever! —gusting up to, I’d
guess, 85 at least, but we had TV, air-conditioning, the Keurig, the microwave,
pretty much everything. The cable TV did go out after a while, but the fiber Internet
never faltered and we found a good weather channel on the darned Roku.
The W4NNF shack and the 6-meter antenna. |
Venturing out on the deck showed the backyard was about the same. The patio table was on its side but OK (I'd stashed the chairs in the radio shack the afternoon before). Oh, the driveway was covered in small limbs and leaves, and there were a few
down at the back of the backyard, but nothing really major. Amazingly, my 6-meter antenna which was mounted on a cheap TV mast still stood. So did the 2-meter aerial on its TV mast. Alas, with one departing gust Sally knocked the 6-meter one down. Oh,
well, I’d been meaning to replace the pitiful thing for a long time.
A trot around the neighborhood after the rain finally paused
showed a few of my neighbors had lost trees. Those were invariably pines or
palms, neither of which grace Unk's yard, thank goodness. Lot of limbs down, some older wooden
fences had given up the ghost; that was about it.
The denouement? Power came back on at 7:30 am and
stayed on. Part of the reason for that is our power lines are underground in
this neighborhood, and the substation we are connected to also serves the local
hospital, so getting it back working is a big priority with the power company.
Now, just across Mobile Bay where the eye had come ashore,
the flooding and power loss and wind damage were terrible. Power was still off
in some areas a week after the storm. Heck, some people in the city—like the
downtown neighborhood where good old Chaos Manor South still stands in all her
glory—were without power for almost that long. So, all things considered, I’d
say me and Miss Dorothy were pretty lucky.
So that’s it, campers. Sure, I feel sorry for the folks with severe damage and who were without power for a long time. But this is the first storm
I’ve ever been able to ride out in comfort. It wasn’t that long ago that Dorothy
and I and daughter Lizbeth were evacuating to Atlanta in the middle of the night or—after Katrina—living
in her university office for days. So, I know how it is. But we down here are
tough when it comes to these storms; they are just a part of life on the Gulf.
Astronomy? As above, I plan to get my yearly M13 taken
before time begins to run out. Hercules is already beginning to get a little
low. I ain’t gonna wimp out like I have a time or two in the past and use
video, either. No, it will be a DSLR, flats, darks, all that good stuff.
Well, I might wimp out a little bit. C8? No. 5-inch
APO? No. It will be my beloved f/7.5 80mm fluorite refractor, Veronica. Yes, I
know a little more focal length would be nice here in the relatively bright
suburbs, but I’m lazy and it is just so easy to get pretty pictures with
Ronnie.
So, stay tuned. If I actually get the skies and haven’t totally forgot how to do deep sky imaging, I should be back here this coming Sunday or (more likely the one after). Until then, muchachos, until then…
We recently experienced something like you did. Utah, as a rule never gets big winds like a hurricane produces, but a few weeks ago we did. We had 90+ mile an hour winds. Massive trees were uprooted all over my neighborhood. There were some crushed cars, houses damaged, and we were without power for about 5 days. It was also nearly 40 degrees colder than our normal 85 degrees for this time of year. We have a little 3500 watt generator that kept the our frozen food cold, a few lights on in the house, and the wifi going, which of course is the most important thing. I don’t envy your having to deal with that far more often than we do.
ReplyDeleteWhen the winds stopped, I actually make it out to a dark site and did some visual and a few photos.
Glad you made it through your hurricane without too much disruption, Rod.
Jeff Marston
Glad it didn't go South for ya 'unc.
ReplyDeleteWe have winter approaching fast here in Perthshire Scotland, temps are down and nights are drawing in rapidly. Bleugh!
Still you got the astro blog out despite all so good on you!
Look after yourselves
Andy Brown