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Follow the adventures of the crew of the starship /Akus Moby/ as they explore The Spinward Main.
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ErisReddoch
Eris Reddoch

Sat

Sep 25
2004

20:46Z

I'm back!

Hello everyone!

Greetings from Northwest Florida. :)

We got power back last night, almost exactly 9 days after we lost it and 
I am luxuriating under the air conditioner, drinking cold water (that I 
didn't have to boil), listening to a football game on the internet and 
trying to catch up on almost 2 weeks of emails. The remaining debris in 
the yard and the impending arrival of another hurricane can wait for 
another day...besides if another storm hits, it will blow all the debris 
off the piles along the road back into the yard anyway.  :)

Just to let you know...the eye came in about 30 miles (about 50 km) west 
of my house and half that of the college where I teach. The east side of 
a hurricane is *not* the place you want to be as we got the full effect 
of the wind and storm surge. I live north of Escambia Bay, about 3 miles 
inland and 50 feet in elevation, so I didn't get any water in the house, 
but we had three huge oaks (2 meter+ diameter trunks) uprooted right 
around us. One of them crushed fences of my neighbors to the north (and 
destroyed a swimming pool). One crushed a storage building and put a 
hole in the roof of a detached garage owned by my neighbor to the south. 
The third crashed onto the roof of my neighbor to the west's house, 
penetrating the roof in several places. We had several smaller trees 
down, or snapped off, and limbs down everywhere, but none hit the house 
so we were lucky. The biggest damage we had was the roof of an old 
storage building was blown off...and that roof is still sitting there 
upside down...I'll have to *eventually* tear the shed down and dispose 
of it, but not now.

If you want to *really* see what it looks like over here check out this 
site... 
http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/news/guides/hurricane/galleries.shtml 
... if you find the pictures of the large bridge with the missing 
sections, a 40 foot high wave lifted them off and dropped them into the 
bay, and note this was *deep* inside the "protected" bay, not out along 
the beaches. I live about 4 miles straight north of where that happened.

The college sent out emails (like any of us could receive them with our 
power out) on Wednesday saying we're to report back for a "General 
Meeting" on 9/27 at 9am at the main campus, and the college will start 
classes on 10/4, so I guess I still have a job to go back to. I'm just 
wondering how much good putting plastic bags over the computers in the 
labs and my office did. The ones in the lab were upstairs, so they 
wouldn't have had water damage (unless the roof went), but the one in my 
office is only sitting on a table, and it's vaguely possible water could 
have gotten that high on the Warrington Campus where I have my 
office...it's just north of NAS Pensacola, and I'm sure you've seen 
pictures of what happened there. What worries me most is that we had 
*lots* of tall pine trees growing near the buildings on the campus, and 
pines tend to snap off and fall on things in a strong wind. Well, I 
guess I'll find out on Monday....assuming they'll allow us onto the 
Warrington campus after the meeting.

Eris

JoeRTexas
Joseph Roberts

Sun

Sep 26
2004

01:03Z

I'm back!

Glad to see you're back online...

JR

BobKondrk
Bob Kondrk

Sun

Sep 26
2004

01:18Z

I'm back!

Quoting Eris Reddoch :

> Hello everyone!

Hiya Eris! :)

> We got power back last night, almost exactly 9 days after we lost it and 
> I am luxuriating under the air conditioner, drinking cold water (that I 
> didn't have to boil), listening to a football game on the internet and 
> trying to catch up on almost 2 weeks of emails. The remaining debris in 
> the yard and the impending arrival of another hurricane can wait for 
> another day...besides if another storm hits, it will blow all the debris 
> off the piles along the road back into the yard anyway.  :)

I'm very glad that you're back! :)

> I live north of Escambia Bay, about 3 miles 
> inland and 50 feet in elevation, so I didn't get any water in the house, 
> but we had three huge oaks (2 meter+ diameter trunks) uprooted right 
> around us. One of them crushed fences of my neighbors to the north (and 
> destroyed a swimming pool). One crushed a storage building and put a 
> hole in the roof of a detached garage owned by my neighbor to the south. 
> The third crashed onto the roof of my neighbor to the west's house, 
> penetrating the roof in several places. We had several smaller trees 
> down, or snapped off, and limbs down everywhere, but none hit the house 
> so we were lucky. The biggest damage we had was the roof of an old 
> storage building was blown off...and that roof is still sitting there 
> upside down...I'll have to *eventually* tear the shed down and dispose 
> of it, but not now.

That was very lucky. :)

> The college sent out emails (like any of us could receive them with our 
> power out) on Wednesday saying we're to report back for a "General 
> Meeting" on 9/27 at 9am at the main campus, and the college will start 
> classes on 10/4, so I guess I still have a job to go back to. 

Whew... :)

-- 
Bob K.

-------------------------------------------------
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TerryMixon
Terry Mixon

Sun

Sep 26
2004

14:34Z

I'm back!

>Hello everyone!
>
>Greetings from Northwest Florida. :)
>
>We got power back last night, almost exactly 9 days after we lost it and 
>I am luxuriating under the air conditioner, drinking cold water (that I 
>didn't have to boil), listening to a football game on the internet and 
>trying to catch up on almost 2 weeks of emails. The remaining debris in 
>the yard and the impending arrival of another hurricane can wait for 
>another day...besides if another storm hits, it will blow all the debris 
>off the piles along the road back into the yard anyway.  :)
>
>Just to let you know...the eye came in about 30 miles (about 50 km) west 
>of my house and half that of the college where I teach. The east side of 
>a hurricane is *not* the place you want to be as we got the full effect 
>of the wind and storm surge. I live north of Escambia Bay, about 3 miles 
>inland and 50 feet in elevation, so I didn't get any water in the house, 
>but we had three huge oaks (2 meter+ diameter trunks) uprooted right 
>around us. One of them crushed fences of my neighbors to the north (and 
>destroyed a swimming pool). One crushed a storage building and put a 
>hole in the roof of a detached garage owned by my neighbor to the south. 
>The third crashed onto the roof of my neighbor to the west's house, 
>penetrating the roof in several places. We had several smaller trees 
>down, or snapped off, and limbs down everywhere, but none hit the house 
>so we were lucky. The biggest damage we had was the roof of an old 
>storage building was blown off...and that roof is still sitting there 
>upside down...I'll have to *eventually* tear the shed down and dispose 
>of it, but not now.
>
>If you want to *really* see what it looks like over here check out this 
>site... 
>http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/news/guides/hurricane/galleries.shtm?l 
>... if you find the pictures of the large bridge with the missing 
>sections, a 40 foot high wave lifted them off and dropped them into the 
>bay, and note this was *deep* inside the "protected" bay, not out along 
>the beaches. I live about 4 miles straight north of where that happened.
>
>The college sent out emails (like any of us could receive them with our 
>power out) on Wednesday saying we're to report back for a "General 
>Meeting" on 9/27 at 9am at the main campus, and the college will start 
>classes on 10/4, so I guess I still have a job to go back to. I'm just 
>wondering how much good putting plastic bags over the computers in the 
>labs and my office did. The ones in the lab were upstairs, so they 
>wouldn't have had water damage (unless the roof went), but the one in my 
>office is only sitting on a table, and it's vaguely possible water could 
>have gotten that high on the Warrington Campus where I have my 
>office...it's just north of NAS Pensacola, and I'm sure you've seen 
>pictures of what happened there. What worries me most is that we had 
>*lots* of tall pine trees growing near the buildings on the campus, and 
>pines tend to snap off and fall on things in a strong wind. Well, I 
>guess I'll find out on Monday....assuming they'll allow us onto the 
>Warrington campus after the meeting.

Glad to see you back. Stop attractiing the darned things. 

Terry

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