Huh.. did Katrina wash all the Natterers away?
I was busy reading the news. The two oak trees in Jackson Square next to the Cathedral went down. The lakeside is flooding. 9th ward is flooding. But mostly the levees are holding and I think they'll be okay. Damage but not a toxic soup bowl thirty feet deep. Probably comparable to Hurricane Betsy or Camille. Which is plenty bad, but NOLA's still going to be there when it's over.
my realtives - biloxi. gulf shores, etc. this isn't fun
Oh, Beth, that's rough. It sounds pretty bad in Gulfport and Biloxi.
I am earwormed with "The only living boy in New York":
I can get all the news I need/On the weather report...
beth, your family is in my thoughts.
Updates:
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A building in Metairie has collapsed, and people are believed to be trapped inside. Rescue officials were still trying to get to any possible victims but were hampered by continuing severe weather. In addition, the East Bank of Jefferson Parish is flooded -- including East Jefferson Hospital. There are also reports of waist-deep water inside homes throughout Metairie.
Oh, beth, I hope all of your relatives and their homes are okay.
In terms of New Orleans, it's St. Bernard and Chalmette that are really getting hammered.
Hurricane Katrina hammered the Lower 9th Ward and St. Bernard Parish, with residents telling tales of stranded people being plucked from their rooftops by passing boaters and flood waters as high as 12 feet well into Chalmette.
Residents fled the surging water, which quickly rose as the brunt of Katrina plowed ashore near eastern St. Bernard Parish.
Arabi resident Donald Bordelon told a Times-Picayune reporter via cell phone that at 8:30 a.m. there was just wind damage the homes on his block of Schnell Drive. But 40 minutes later, floodwaters had risen over the stove in his kitchen, as he scrambled to ready his boat for an evacuation.
Residents reported high water flooding such institutions as Rocky and Carlo's restaurant at the corner of St. Bernard Highway and Lloyd's Avenue. Others reported that homes on Campagna Drive were nearly underwater.
At Chalmette High School on Judge Perez Drive, officials had set up a shelter of last resort late Sunday. By Monday morning, the first floor of the high school was under water and the evacuees huddled in rooms on the second floor, reporting that they could only see rooftops of the surrounding homes.
The St. Bernard Parish government building, also on Judge Perez Drive, was said to have taken on 8 to 10 feet of water. The government building is in a stretch of the highway that comprises one of the parish's main economic centers, with a huge new Super Wal Mart nearby.
Huh.. did Katrina wash all the Natterers away?
There's a Katrina and the Waves joke in there somewhere.