09.13.08 Hurricane Ike

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 191

  • @cratedog64
    @cratedog64 3 года назад +38

    As a BOI, the old saying of having sand between your toes is true. There's something about living on the island, but I will admit, after Ike I moved off the island.
    A month without utilities, and the first week, before the sounds of generators at night, it was eerily and unnervingly quiet. No crickets, no birds, no traffic noise, absolutely nothing, and pitch black, I couldn't see my hands in front of me at night. Pictures fail miserably to grasp the level of destruction.

  • @IslandGirl-nt6ry
    @IslandGirl-nt6ry 3 года назад +19

    My parents built a house on the west end in 1957. We lived there for 9 years. It never had a drop of water in it until Ike. It survived Carla and Alicia. But Ike was different, direct hit and the storm surge was huge.

  • @StarBudgets
    @StarBudgets 3 года назад +34

    I remember when we got the mandatory evac orders and piled into my SUV, we had no idea we would ultimately end up right back at home to ride the storm out. I sat in unmoving traffic for 17 hrs in the harsh humid heat of Texas (we would turn the vehicle off when we were stuck at stand stills to try and save gas), all the ice had melted in the ice chest, all the waters and Gatorade’s had been drank, and finally when my gas gauge had reached the halfway point between E and 1/4 of a tank left with no gas stations open or that had gas in sight we decided to turn around a go home! I remember seeing car after car that had either ran out of gas or overheated lining the grass between the highway and feeder roads, families/kids sitting on their vehicles, even mattresses laid on next to the highway with kids and babies laying on them! I was so scared because Katrina had hit NOLA the year before and I was afraid that was what’s going to happen to us........I’ll admit, my family definitely was one of the lucky ones. We lost power for a day maybe 2, and that’s it!! The worst part was finding gas, food, and water!! No stores had any left for days after the storm hit. But we all survived praise God.

    • @yoo909
      @yoo909 3 года назад +2

      that is lucky. we evacuated for rita, but not ike. after ike we spent at least 3 weeks without power in alvin. during harvey, we never lost power once. that was a different type of hell.

    • @dmtribaltyphoon5001
      @dmtribaltyphoon5001 3 года назад

      yikes all i get are tornadoes which thanfully are far between and even then dont come close to home save for 1. a EF1 tornado blew past the farm while we slept or at the very least a ef0 tornado cause when i got up that morning my driveway was litered with debris we didnt know a tornado had hit us till the neibours came with the exact same debris for the 1 mile that the tornado struck. But Tornadoes are a fast burn of panic hurricanes is more of a slow burn since you get notice in advance and can at the very least get out of the way.

    • @Stitchwitchstitch
      @Stitchwitchstitch 2 года назад +1

      That takes guts and smarts! I’ve never had to deal with an evac situation, knock on wood, and I imagine it must be a huge undertaking, narrowing down necessities and supplies, dealing with kiddos. some people get judgy about those who don't evac, but i don't think they can fathom what it takes. Or that not everyone has the resources. OR that people try like you did, but couldn't and end up stuck, pretty much forced to risk everything and sit through the storm.

    • @history6988
      @history6988 3 месяца назад +1

      That was Rita, not Ike.

  • @ladylioness9808
    @ladylioness9808 6 лет назад +38

    Ike had us w/o power for 2 weeks in Sw Houston. We had wind damage but no water damage. We had no street lights, grocery stores were empty, no ATM, and it was just a huge inconvenience. On top of that it was HOT. We barbequed everyday and my job was using a backup generator. It was miserable.

    • @model-man7802
      @model-man7802 4 года назад +2

      We did it for four months.You become obsessed with ice and Gasoline.

    • @elizabethford7263
      @elizabethford7263 3 года назад

      Were you in Meyerland?

    • @yoo909
      @yoo909 3 года назад

      first time i had "vegie burgers" off of the bbq. mom lied to me and told me it was a normal burger. i couldnt tell lol. glad we had that deep in the freezer to feed us that deep without power lol. i do remember how hot it was too. I spent the time in Alvin.

    • @MrCalverino
      @MrCalverino 4 месяца назад

      we went from the year 2008 to 1950😭

  • @natskivna
    @natskivna 5 лет назад +23

    The storm nobody outside of south Texas paid attention to. It hit the same weekend as the U.S. financial crisis. In fact, those of us in Houston didn't know what the hell the crisis was until days later!

    • @jamiestewart1223
      @jamiestewart1223 4 года назад +2

      I paid attention.

    • @rodneytatum9816
      @rodneytatum9816 4 года назад

      The u.s. financial crisis began in 2006. Lol

    • @laurenanderson3618
      @laurenanderson3618 3 года назад +1

      Ike hit us as a TS in east texas and screwed our little town up.. I can only imagine what it was actually like 4 hours away 💀

  • @GinaU832
    @GinaU832 2 года назад +9

    I live outside of Houston. I just remember the howling winds that never seemed to stop, they went on for hours and hours. Ike was a huge storm that left an indelible mark on me. We had a lot of damage and to do this day, I fear hurricane season.

    • @kristinebailey6554
      @kristinebailey6554 Год назад +2

      We got out and bought a house in the Rocky's. NEVER returning to live in Texas.

    • @billyhndrsn4542
      @billyhndrsn4542 Год назад +2

      I have thought of moving to inland Texas to be away from hurricane seasonal threats. A good 400 miles between the coast sounds right. Going to check properties around Lubbock area, closer to a medium size city away from coastal threats.

  • @drewofearth6681
    @drewofearth6681 2 года назад +8

    This is… astoundingly well made.

  • @ScreamingYellowMach
    @ScreamingYellowMach 5 лет назад +26

    A month without power after Ike was horrible. But the city did bounce back from the hurricane.

    • @NenaL86
      @NenaL86 8 месяцев назад

      Imagine being 8 months pregnant during that. I barely slept & if it wasn't for a few friends that would offer us shower's & a couple nights of sleep at their house, Idk how I would've gotten through that. I had my daughter 5 weeks early (Sep.27th) The doctor thinks it was bc of the stress from Ike. We got our power restored the day I went into labor 😅

  • @javorisscott4288
    @javorisscott4288 5 лет назад +38

    Im 15 and i lived through hurricane rita, ike, katrina, harvey, and tropical storm imelda

    • @KarmaP3
      @KarmaP3 4 года назад +3

      Ur blessed to have lived through those I'm 12 and lived through ike Harvey laura delta imelda

    • @kelleygreenEmpressOne
      @kelleygreenEmpressOne 3 года назад +3

      I'm 45 and I did too! Lol plus Alisha!

    • @yoo909
      @yoo909 3 года назад +4

      huricane rita was 2005, and even if you were 15; you would be born in 2006........

    • @javorisscott4288
      @javorisscott4288 3 года назад +2

      @@yoo909 so?

    • @N1ckT1107
      @N1ckT1107 3 года назад +3

      @@yoo909 this comment was posted a year ago...

  • @timezarehardfordreamers4431
    @timezarehardfordreamers4431 2 года назад +3

    I'll never forget this storm in my life my mom passed away in Herman hospital downtown Houston in the 6 th and the storm hit right after that and tore the roof off of my granddad's apartment at Concord at Little York Rd ...

  • @allandavis8201
    @allandavis8201 5 лет назад +12

    I have said this before, it does not matter how well you build a house, a storm,hurricane,tornado could be so strong that nothing could withstand them, if you want to live in a weather event region you have to be prepared to loose your property, it isn’t a nice thing to have happen,but you need to be aware and prepared to start all over again even knowing that it could happen again-- soon!!!! Good luck to you all.
    Thanks for an interesting but sad video, Mother Nature will always have the last say, no matter how well we prepare, and this video concentrated on the practical side of the devastation, something other films do not address, thank you.

    • @garyfrancis6193
      @garyfrancis6193 3 года назад +1

      Lose

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 3 года назад +2

      A wise man 2000 years ago warned against building your house on sand. It wasn't just a story meant to impart wisdom.

  • @southbrazosbass244
    @southbrazosbass244 4 года назад +8

    Never forget that when a hurricane is about to make a direct hit where you live, you are about to go without power for at least a week, and that's fast, which only happens if you are closest to the power plant. They restore power in order, rebuilding power lines in sequence as they move away from the power plant or junction station. Also, remember that each time a hurricane hits, it will always snow the following winter, its a meteorological phenomena. Snowed in Houston Christmas day 2004, which was random, but after Ike in 2008 it snowed good, and after Harvey several times, I guess powerful ones can cause multiple wintery precipitation events. It can snow without a hurricane hitting prior to that winter, but it has ALWAYS snowed after major hurricanes within my lifetime, except hurricane Rita which swerved away from us so maybe that's why.

    • @KarmaP3
      @KarmaP3 4 года назад +1

      Dude it snowed where I live after harvey

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 3 года назад +1

      @@KarmaP3 Same here, but then I live in Indiana lol.

    • @trevorlahey1956
      @trevorlahey1956 4 месяца назад

      Noticed it as well. I remember getting off the bus after Ike that Christmas break it was snowing like crazy

    • @raelynn.baileigh
      @raelynn.baileigh 3 месяца назад

      @@KarmaP3the good ole days

  • @jessicabernard4674
    @jessicabernard4674 3 года назад +11

    I remember going through Hurricane Ike when I was just 6 years old. It was one of the scariest moments of my life. The house me and my family were at in Beaumont had nearly collapsed. I remember seeing the fierce winds against the other houses and trees.

  • @belindaramirez3246
    @belindaramirez3246 2 года назад +4

    Sad sad memories. I was still in a wheelchair; my kids: were 7-year-old7 & 17. I recall one day when my 7 year old & I were home. My 17-year-old came running from 3 blocks away; it was still flooded. My 17 year old carried me upstairs in an empty apartment, then, my 7 yr old & a little boy next door. He had to leave in a metal bucket like a boat, barely big enough for a dog. 😔recall

  • @wesleyjoiner929
    @wesleyjoiner929 3 года назад +7

    I worked disaster relief on this storm. It was a scary situation.

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh 3 года назад +8

    Building on pure sand on a barrier island is just not a good idea. People will deny the possibility that anything really catastrophic could happen to them, or their home, but in reality, it does.

  • @klyonsden
    @klyonsden 5 лет назад +10

    About a year after Ike, I went to Boliver and saw the bare slabs where homes used to be at. But, I saw that many of the owners of these slabs put an RV on that slab. Actually thought that was a good fix. If a storm is coming, hook up to the RV and head out of danger.

    • @Scorp006
      @Scorp006 3 года назад +3

      It's a common thing now. Large wooden deck with a rv or travel trailer below.

  • @hmprodigy7124
    @hmprodigy7124 5 лет назад +12

    Well here is an eyewitness by me. When I lived in Galveston Texas we lived in a sea house next to pleasant Pier we all ate at bubba gumps after we went to go swim I never thought that the waves would be so high so I went to the sea bar the tide pulled me really good luckily I made it out we went home next day I look out my window after getting an alert on my phone saying warning flood warning for Galveston beach I looked and saw like 20Ft tall waves and told my mom my dad ran in the house after going to the other part of the island to go find new things to do he yelled get in the closet I said why that’s when he said a hurricane is going to hit soon I started shaking I kept getting warnings on my little radio my mom got for me after about 10 to 20 minutes and that’s when we knew it hit we heard like huge waves hitting and it sounded like bombs hitting the ground when the waves hit

  • @DatGuyWhoPlays
    @DatGuyWhoPlays 6 лет назад +27

    Then Harvey came along.

  • @kristinebailey6554
    @kristinebailey6554 Год назад +2

    We bought a house in Dickinson, Texas, closed on the house and moved in. Three months later, Hurricane Harvey sent 28 inches of filthy dirty bayou water into our home. Within minutes it went from some water running under the front wall of the living room to being knee deep. We walked out at 3 a.m. with our cats in carriers in my kayak, water waist deep, fire ants crawling on us and stinging. I got to a higher point on I-45 and sat down and scraped the fire ants off. Ironically, we moved into the apartments above an airplane hangar at the old Lone Star Aviation Museum and lived a year on Galveston while our house was completely renovated. After less than three years we sold the house and got the hell out of hell/Texas. Happy here in the Rocky Mountains. Of course, we weren't told when buying a house, that rice used to be grown in the area. Stop building in a flood plain and stop asking the entire country to subsidize your decision to live at risk. The man in this video from League City needs to stop blaming the feds and move to high ground. Schwartz is 100% right.

  • @christydowns783
    @christydowns783 3 года назад +7

    I don't think a hurricane's category should be released until after it has passed. People don't evacuate because 'It's just a category 2' yet storms can (and do) change in a heartbeat

    • @LilyWillow22
      @LilyWillow22 Год назад

      The categories have to do with miles per hour of the wind

  • @molonlave2193
    @molonlave2193 2 года назад +4

    I would have evacuated if a Cat 2 hurricane were to come

  • @lisaroyle1966
    @lisaroyle1966 7 месяцев назад +1

    DAMN, she's awesome . Only a person who was born and raised on the Island can stand their ground ❤

  • @whoever6458
    @whoever6458 3 года назад +4

    They might want to take a look at some of the earthquake building codes to better reinforce houses. They might also want to look at the engineering work being done in fluid dynamics to perhaps find a way to slow storm surge water and do things like preventing turbulent water flow near the houses.
    I was just watching something earlier about a Russian aircraft. I forget the name of the thing but it had four rear-mounted engines, which means they had to put the elevator at the top of the tail fin. In our American and British designed aircraft with rear-mounted engines, having the elevator up that high has caused problems, as has having the engines behind much of the rest of the aircraft since things breaking off the aircraft might get sucked into the engines (and have done so). In the Russian design, they slightly changed the leading edge of the part of the wing closest to the body of the plane in such a way so as to divert the air passing over the wings, plus they mounted the engines higher than planes like the DC-10. In any case, I wonder if there isn't a way to make the piles supporting those houses more in the shape of a boat or to even build something in front of the house facing the sea to divert the turbulent water flow and potential damage from storm surges since water flow shares many principles with air flow. Planes stall and fall to the ground if there is too much turbulent air flow passing over the wings so maybe it would work to build the buildings so that they won't stall so to speak by preventing that turbulent flow. It should be easier since buildings don't tend to change their angle of attack and you know basically which way the force is going to come from the waves.

  • @Mhel2023
    @Mhel2023 Год назад +1

    We didn't have power for 2 weeks (Houston). I was dating am HPD officer, and she would be patrolling the city, call me and tell me to get over to whatever gas station, they just got a gas delivery and/ or they had ice come in. I'd make these trips at 2 or 3 in the morning, whenever that phone rang, to help keep the generator going.
    To this day I hate scented candles.

  • @Ultrase7en767
    @Ultrase7en767 3 года назад +3

    I was 3 when this happened, lived in Kingwood at the time, our tree fell on our neighbors house, luckily I moved about a year before Harvey hit

  • @dementedsagittarius
    @dementedsagittarius 4 года назад +5

    Ooof the fact that the upload date is in 2017...Harvey is on his way

  • @zflyz7136
    @zflyz7136 6 лет назад +4

    I grew up on the coast and got hit by Ike we had flooding for days.... I remember when Katrina hit even we felt it all the way from Texas..... when the weather service saids leave that means get your ass out of their... it is hot and humid the days following

  • @anitamitchell3452
    @anitamitchell3452 4 года назад +3

    I lived in Chambers County ... I 10 acted as a dam to keep the water to the south. That's 90 miles inland.

  • @vermouthsavage4750
    @vermouthsavage4750 3 года назад +1

    Lived in IL during this but just recently moved to FL 5 or 6 years ago. Definitely though hurricanes where just a regular storm. Now I know anything above a CAT 3 is an issue. Whole reason we bought a house inland and not in any flood zones

  • @annaclairebayles.chaney8494
    @annaclairebayles.chaney8494 6 лет назад +8

    I rode Ike out certain death was not an issue but I never counted on fires! Ike was one mean storm!

    • @terr777
      @terr777 3 года назад +1

      I housed evacuees in Northeast TX. The storm came on up and knocked the power out there.

  • @ashelycosette5551
    @ashelycosette5551 2 года назад +2

    We left glad we did

  • @kyleparker733
    @kyleparker733 2 года назад +1

    I live in SW Ohio. 24 hours after Ike made landfall, it arrived in Ohio with very strong wind gusts. It wrecked havoc on our power grid. It took them a week and half to restore power to everyone. Massive power outage. We lived in the dark for a solid week. Cat 2 my arse.

  • @angusosborne3151
    @angusosborne3151 3 года назад +2

    At the end it should say stay tuned, more to come.

  • @A_Muzik
    @A_Muzik 7 лет назад +20

    I refuse to live near the coast.

    • @andrewthurman928
      @andrewthurman928 6 лет назад +1

      Same

    • @boogiemama8278
      @boogiemama8278 6 лет назад +1

      AJ Muzik I don’t but I don’t really live on the coast I live close by it tho

    • @redvixen5944
      @redvixen5944 5 лет назад +1

      I live in the houston/Katy area and we STILL got demolished

    • @squirmtastic
      @squirmtastic 4 года назад

      Lmao u should live faaarrr inland because even in houston we get hurricanes and bullshit

    • @model-man7802
      @model-man7802 4 года назад +2

      Living near the coast is not a bad thing.Its just making the right decision to leave(if you can) and not waiting till the day before the storm to go find batteries,propane and bread.I live at the coast and these idiots get mad because Walmart has no bread two days before the storm arrives.Be ready,think ahead....way ahead.

  • @TheBandit7613
    @TheBandit7613 3 года назад +11

    Keep in mind, this will happen again and again and again just like it has for the last million years.

    • @laurenanderson3618
      @laurenanderson3618 3 года назад +2

      I know that's right!! It is simply natural disasters.. NOT "global warming" natural disasters have existed since the beginning of time!!!

    • @everythingfiction6266
      @everythingfiction6266 2 года назад

      @@laurenanderson3618 you simply cant ignore that these storms are happeing more often. For example we have been in last 7 years above average Atlantic hurricane seasons, don't get me started on other areas. We also know that the ice is melting quickly. Why? Well warmer seasons means that these colder temperature are well not so cold anymore. In the past it use to be rare to have a major hurricane but now their like 3-5 every year. Now these storms aren't just happening in one area floods and firestorms are happening in europe of all places. Natural disasters are rare in europe honeslty the Germany floods are really the only flood or weather event that happened in europe this century. Fire seasons in the 1990s were 5 months with major fires but in 2000-2010 their were total of 550 major fires and the season waa 7 months longer then the average 5 month period. Honestly I can't name everything but do your research before you open your throat and be more thoughtful

  • @zflyz7136
    @zflyz7136 6 лет назад +14

    11:10 ah the last home standing is the home of a marine.... there’s a marine flag I love it...

  • @Gblue162
    @Gblue162 3 года назад +1

    Legend has it that Ike had 2 eyes.

  • @Coastiestevie
    @Coastiestevie 4 года назад +8

    Can someone teach this guy how to pronounce bolivar peninsula?

  • @deltagpap
    @deltagpap 4 года назад

    My mom worked for the food bank in Gilchrist. She always said that there were many more people who died because they could not get out. Many were disabled and communication was not the best. My sister left Gilcrest to pick up a friends son from a private school could not return. There was no warning that the ferry would not continue running. She came to my house, 150 miles north of the beach. I still had over 10K worth of damage from tornados and tree damage. Both my mother and sister lost everything.

    • @deltagpap
      @deltagpap 4 года назад

      We were not told until six hours before it hit to evacuate. We were told that it was going to Corpus Christi.

  • @drunkenpelositreasonousbid2566
    @drunkenpelositreasonousbid2566 3 года назад +9

    Ghetto Island made a full comeback, it's even more ghetto now

  • @JerryTemple-d6n
    @JerryTemple-d6n 4 месяца назад

    Mt. Ferrite is wise.. history repeats every 100 years.

  • @apricxtt
    @apricxtt 4 года назад +3

    Anyone from Heathside/ watching this for homework?

  • @dianna7795
    @dianna7795 6 месяцев назад +1

    We lived on west end of galv- we had whole houses in our canals! Everything downstairs was gone even our grass! The trauma was crazy! I seen front of houses torn off- 1 house u were looking into the kitchen - the Refrig was open & EVERYTHING was still in it even in the door next to it EVERYTHING was still sitting on the counters including the coffee pot! It was really weird! Folks n town that stayed said water came up real fast but as Ike moved on land it was like God came & took the water away FASTER than it came up ut went away! Lydia Ann sucked as a mayor we went to 1st town hall meeting- it was absurd! Their were out of state contractors on the island when residents couldn’t return! We left but coming back across the causeway they were not even checking IS’s! FEMA buses were coming in & I swear FEMA STANDS FOR: Find Every Mexican Available! Those buses were full of them! FEMA SUCKED! Most didn’t qualify for FEMA help but u had to give them all ur personal Info to b told NOPE U DONT QUALIFY! I feel like the city & fed gov let the citizens of galv down bad! Ike was the FORGOTTEN STORM!

  • @BubbaGamingYT
    @BubbaGamingYT 2 года назад

    I was born the year before and ike I was not even 1 wen it hit my hometown of Houston Texas I even saw the eye of ike

    • @RatusMax
      @RatusMax 2 года назад

      I was sleeping through ike. I did wake up briefly during the storm hearing the tree ram against the apartment building. Then thought "if I die, I die" and went back to sleep. I had surgery done just some 2 days before lol.

    • @BubbaGamingYT
      @BubbaGamingYT Год назад

      I was also in the hospital In downtown Houston I had a seizure from being sick we lost power and I got really over heated

  • @kristinebailey6554
    @kristinebailey6554 Год назад

    I should add that when we bought our home that flooded, at the closing in the title office, we were told we didn't need flood insurance because we weren't in a flood plain and our home had never flooded. We had Dickinson bayou at the end of our street. And the only reason our home hadn't ever flooded is because it was built the year AFTER Camille struck. Thank God we didn't listen to the employees at that title office.

  • @hunterhadley8202
    @hunterhadley8202 4 года назад +1

    We got the winds from this in Indiana..

  • @quiteliterallyaweirdo6563
    @quiteliterallyaweirdo6563 5 лет назад +1

    I don't remember Hurricane ike I'm pretty young and was very little. I was and still am fine. My family is pretty blessed. We dont flood. And my grandparents house is like steel. I'm glad were okay. I have family who lived there thats one of the most important place to me. It was a beach id visit every summer with family. Seeing what happened to it before i even knew it exist makes me really upset.

  • @danetibbetts6012
    @danetibbetts6012 4 года назад +2

    I wonder what there “destroyed” definition is. Over half the homes are still here in Shoreacres

  • @sherryglisson4885
    @sherryglisson4885 3 года назад +2

    You know....after the great hurricane of 1900 that killed thousands of people and pretty much wiped out Galveston the people of that island took wagons teams of mules and dozens of men armed with nothing but shovels and pick axes and they spent several years jacking up houses and raising the ground beneath them a good 6 to 8 feet taller....a monumental task done in that day with those tools ....it NEEDS to be done AGAIN this time with the U.S. Army Corps of engineers to prevent another disaster of that magnitude....one day a category 5 will hit the Texas coastline and push a 30 foot wall of storm surge before it....

    • @billyhndrsn4542
      @billyhndrsn4542 Год назад +1

      Hurricane Ike had a storm surge of a Cat 5 system that began a couple days before the hurricane landed. Ike coming into the shallower Gulf waters died down to a Cat 3 before landfall, with the most destructive surge on the dirty East side of the storm, Bolivar peninsula saw the 25 to 30ft surge water.

  • @nenblom
    @nenblom 3 года назад +2

    For God’s sakes people, if you are ordered to evacuate then GET OUT!!

    • @TexasRose50
      @TexasRose50 2 года назад +1

      Sometimes that’s easier said than done for some people. And then there’s people just too stupid. That’s a different story.

  • @jaxoneddins4852
    @jaxoneddins4852 3 года назад

    I lived thru Hurricane Hugo when it hit SC

  • @thomasboren3580
    @thomasboren3580 2 месяца назад

    IKE had build way out in Atlantic had all that push of sea water and when we seen videos of waves hitting Islands close to Cuba at four story high we knew this was going to be catastrophic for Galveston, I lived on highest part of Island as a born and raised one and I told everyone get out just as soon as city says go , we had four foot of water in house and the loss was insane, the sad part is all that waited to late getting out and elders that we lost shortly after the loss they had because of stress so yes Island was rebuilt but insurance laws were passed to build better but inspectors passed places like homes they know shouldn’t have passed and it’s going to be a problem again

  • @pinchmesh8642
    @pinchmesh8642 5 лет назад

    That's why people buy insurance. Hurricanes are not predictable.

  • @dennisarterburn18
    @dennisarterburn18 5 лет назад +3

    I have always had a pipe dream to live on or near Galveston Island. If I was billionaire and the folks in the know said time to get out....well if I was smart enough to have those resources....I would be smart enough to get my butt out.

    • @liverpoolishgirl
      @liverpoolishgirl 4 года назад +1

      Been there. The whole place felt haunted to me. Like Gettysburg.

  • @sherryhartin2055
    @sherryhartin2055 4 месяца назад

    Our home in Huffman ( miles inland) was destroyed by a neighbor's tree that fell on it. Was left homeless

  • @ThatsAkira166
    @ThatsAkira166 4 года назад +7

    The day I was born September 10 2008 bruh

    • @J83838
      @J83838 4 года назад +2

      may 29th 2000 lmaoao

    • @loyiee.3976
      @loyiee.3976 4 года назад +2

      September 9th 2008

    • @sherry5305
      @sherry5305 4 года назад +6

      I feel old reading these comments...

    • @ThatsAkira166
      @ThatsAkira166 4 года назад

      @@sherry5305 how old r u

    • @xXxGnuVirusxXx
      @xXxGnuVirusxXx 4 года назад +2

      @@sherry5305 dont speak to the kids or theyll put you on a list

  • @nancyowensby8427
    @nancyowensby8427 3 года назад +1

    I went thru katrina, ike, TS allison, but I never hear anyone talk about rita.

  • @indy_go_blue6048
    @indy_go_blue6048 3 года назад +3

    I love that Texas Open Beach law and wish it was a federal statute. All the beaches should be open for everyone and people outside the affected area shouldn't have to pay to rebuild them over and over again. My city has done that with property along our local river: You can keep your current property but once it floods and destroys the structure the city can use imminent domain to claim it and turn it into parkland.

  • @1TruNub
    @1TruNub 2 года назад

    I was 17 years old before that I drove a 1991 Dodge pickup Hurricane Ike dropped Tree on it destroying it

  • @ironangel667
    @ironangel667 6 лет назад +3

    Two weeks without power we were out of power for a month my house was damaged beyond repair and i still live here so boo hoo

  • @Nick-zn1vj
    @Nick-zn1vj Год назад

    Oh yeah we went to Dallas
    I Remer the flea market where I got that Rolling Stone cover with Britney Spears:An American Tragedy
    Wegot back home and I remember the free food they were giving out
    I loved it
    I loved the food it was "american food" I growing up Mexican wasn't accustomed to
    I was like 16
    What a HELL HOLE 2008 was
    The only shining moment that year was getting to see my grandma and grandpa
    I was in the early stages of a decade of depression
    How sad
    Had I known
    Had I gotten help I'd probably would of had a better more prosperous life

  • @bipolarspock6145
    @bipolarspock6145 2 года назад

    3 days and I had power power back

  • @dianagruver5767
    @dianagruver5767 3 года назад +3

    That one woman. Spent their life savings to build a home and retire to Galveston. 🤔 It’s Galveston! It’s a sandbar! I love Galveston, even though I’ve never lived there. But come on people how dumb can you be?? She acts so surprised that this happened. 🤦🏼‍♀️

  • @allendove2922
    @allendove2922 Год назад

    I'm not on board with the scale being broken. I do understand their point about the damage. But they're the Insurance Council and we shouldn't go off damage for them. That's what we do with the tornados and the Enhanced Fujita scale that rated El Reno an EF-3. That's too dependent on where it hits.

  • @AlvaSudden
    @AlvaSudden 4 года назад +3

    Don't rebuild. That's obvious.

  • @J83838
    @J83838 4 года назад

    i remember this i was 9 when it happened 😳

  • @danetibbetts5302
    @danetibbetts5302 3 года назад

    Homes is shoreacres we’re flooded not destroyed 80 percent of those homes are still standing

  • @x-tremeslayer7838
    @x-tremeslayer7838 4 месяца назад

    August 1, 1989...wrong, that was Chantal

  • @thomasboren3580
    @thomasboren3580 2 месяца назад

    By the way the numbers on loss of people is more than a hundred not the number this video says and this is the number never found still

  • @nancyfahey7518
    @nancyfahey7518 2 года назад

    We need phones that can turn down the freakin music!

  • @lisaholmes8881
    @lisaholmes8881 6 месяцев назад

    People wouldn’t leave by bus because they couldn’t take their dogs. They changed that rule after Ike.

  • @elizabethford7263
    @elizabethford7263 3 года назад

    Its interesting that the # of deaths is different. Ive heard from the local news it was 99, when they found the last woman's remains from Bolivar across the Bay.

  • @rbjones72703
    @rbjones72703 2 года назад

    Ike took out the historic Balinese Room:(

  • @kingliamjacobrileyisback2324
    @kingliamjacobrileyisback2324 3 года назад

    That was 366 days before i was born

  • @hermiscortez4285
    @hermiscortez4285 5 лет назад

    good thing that I lived in Baton Rouge

    • @stormwarning1235
      @stormwarning1235 3 года назад +1

      Yea, BR got 80 mph winds from Katrina, Rita, Gustav. And in 2016, suffered 25 inches of rain in 24 hours for a biblical flood. Really safe place.

  • @sherylhowell5320
    @sherylhowell5320 2 года назад

    I was in Galveston County jail when Ike hit Galveston.

  • @iamarizonaball2642
    @iamarizonaball2642 Год назад +1

    Ayo why does this look like a cod mw2 intro scene?

  • @KiezenX
    @KiezenX 4 года назад +4

    Why it seems like the world changed after Ike

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 3 года назад +1

      A friend experienced the Xenia OH tornado during the Super Outbreak in 1974. He said the same thing.

    • @KiezenX
      @KiezenX 3 года назад

      @@indy_go_blue6048 It’s just I remember whole changes that took place on tv and in the area affected by ike that I lived in culture and many other maybe it was just coincidental timing but it sure is noticeable and odd

  • @allinyofeelings1884
    @allinyofeelings1884 4 года назад +2

    Wtf is a peninchula?? I've heard of peninsula...

  • @elizabethtorresliberge3373
    @elizabethtorresliberge3373 5 лет назад

    Hi, I'm new to Houston,Can you swim in those waters?

    • @htxmiguel6552
      @htxmiguel6552 5 лет назад +2

      Elizabeth Torres Liberge Hell No!!

    • @KarmaP3
      @KarmaP3 4 года назад +1

      No

    • @RatusMax
      @RatusMax 2 года назад

      Hmm I recommend you look up IKE(already did that I see), Allison, Harvey, Imelda (as you can see, these flood events are not once in a lifetime.), Tax Day floods, Memorial day floods (It's flood city.)

  • @raelynn.baileigh
    @raelynn.baileigh 3 месяца назад

    34:29 damn right

  • @sitedeltalover1287
    @sitedeltalover1287 5 лет назад +2

    my name is isaac and my sister calls me ike lol

  • @model-man7802
    @model-man7802 4 года назад

    Who was president back then?

  • @angusosborne3151
    @angusosborne3151 3 года назад

    The big bad wolf destroyed the house's of the little pigs but even the big bad wolf has to run from mother nature.

  • @Rexag
    @Rexag 5 месяцев назад

    Insurance Council.... well, I hope you have cleaned up the estimators and legit claims... because my house was roofless and damage from the rain with no roof... I say that because all I got was money for a new roof... what about the broken windows, flood damage, personal items...? people got their homes rebuilt and I got $12k for a roof. took me two years to get the house back together myself. Lied to about that storm ... wind was height.... 140 mph gusts and sustained 115 mph. Storm surge was 25 ft in places.... one tough storm!

  • @KarmaP3
    @KarmaP3 4 года назад

    May 28 bruh

  • @Nick-zn1vj
    @Nick-zn1vj Год назад

    24:59

  • @Spectre2808-z9v
    @Spectre2808-z9v 5 лет назад +4

    I was only 8 when it all happened

  • @daleshelden8394
    @daleshelden8394 Год назад

    Fact is you shouldn't build in hurricane prone zones!

  • @KarmaP3
    @KarmaP3 4 года назад

    Hurricane in Texas act like mongraal

  • @KarmaP3
    @KarmaP3 4 года назад

    Dude I'm living in a house that got hit by ike rita harvey laura delta imelda coastal Texas sucks

    • @KarmaP3
      @KarmaP3 4 года назад

      It's nice but hurricanes suck

  • @julienrockingham-ip4co
    @julienrockingham-ip4co 4 месяца назад

    Some people can't evacuate because they simply have nowhere else to go. You're literally trapped in one spot a rock and a hard place. I believe they call. I was in Puerto Rico for hurricane Maria. We went 8 months without power.
    I couldn't get back to the states because everything. I had had got washed away and blown away. But here in the states, not everyone has to homes.Not everyone has a family that you can just go to and be okay with them

  • @allandavis8201
    @allandavis8201 4 года назад

    Dr Gilbert strikes me as a half empty sort of man, it seems he thinks that when homes are destroyed they shouldn’t be rebuilt, purely on economic grounds, “why would you want to build a home “ (costal homes), my answer, why not, you can build a home anywhere and it could be destroyed by a natural disaster or man made effect, so you should build wherever you want, and build a home that can at least withstand extreme weather events, but, as one commentator said, you can’t build any structure that could withstand everything thrown at it. Maybe I am wrong, but Dr Gilbert is a doomsayer, and instead of moaning about it he should put his expertise into designing homes and commercial buildings that can withstand the extreme weather conditions.
    I can’t understand why some of those modern buildings like the medical facilities won’t be able to be used again, certainly they looked in a condition that they just needed to be gotten dry again and repairs (not that they showed much of those types of damage) carried out, then they should be fine, I would not like to see them demolished, it’s a waste of materials, and a lot of it considering the size of those buildings.
    Surly insurance on commercial properties is a must have, and on residential it should be mandatory, and if you live in an area susceptible to extreme weather events then having a policy with specific clauses that cover your type of risk should be mandatory, and insurance companies should have a cap on the amount of premiums they can charge, to me insurance is a necessity not a luxury, rebuilding a once popular region is hard enough, without the capital to do that you might as well give up because it’s not possible to return it to the way it was before.

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 3 года назад +1

      I support anybody's right to build where they want as long as they're willing to accept the consequences and not ask me to contribute unless it's my decision. If I decide to build on the side of an active volcano I should be the one 100% responsible.

    • @indy_go_blue6048
      @indy_go_blue6048 3 года назад +2

      @@TheBandit7613 That's great, really. But one who builds on a volcano shouldn't ask for money from the government to rebuild his house after it erupts.

  • @thomasboren3580
    @thomasboren3580 2 месяца назад

    IKE had build way out in Atlantic had all that push of sea water and when we seen videos of waves hitting Islands close to Cuba at four story high we knew this was going to be catastrophic for Galveston, I lived on highest part of Island as a born and raised one and I told everyone get out just as soon as city says go , we had four foot of water in house and the loss was insane, the sad part is all that waited to late getting out and elders that we lost shortly after the loss they had because of stress so yes Island was rebuilt but insurance laws were passed to build better but inspectors passed places like homes they know shouldn’t have passed and it’s going to be a problem again