My
husband, myself and 3 children normally live with my parents or
on their property. We were in the process of building a new home
on the lot behind their house. We had just finished building my
parents home from a fire in 2004. As Katrina was approaching the
Gulf of Mexico, my father (a semi-retired tug boat captain) decided
that he wasn’t going to be leaving our family home in Pearlington,
Mississippi. Pearlington is located on the Mississippi-Louisiana
state line and is approximately 4 miles from the Gulf. It was not
an unusual thing for us to stay for a hurricane as we didn’t
receive much water even during hurricane Camille. Well, my husband,
Tommy, made plans to stay and therefore, I decided to stay. We have
a total of 8 children. 7 Girls between the ages of 24 and 16 and
1 son age 14, named Janssen. My son tends to fight with his sister
(the 16 year old) so when my mother decided to evacuate she also
decided that my son would stay with us in Pearlington (I did try
to convince her to take him, but no one thought that the storm would
be as bad as it was).
The day of the
storm started out pretty normal for a hurricane, lots of wind and
some rain, electricity went out early, etc. We thought that we had
a working radio but found out that someone had left the radio on
and the batteries were dead. All of the extra batteries were gone.
With no means of communication (other than our cell phones) we were
doing okay. We had food and shelter and there weren’t any
trees left on the property as my husband had cut them all down to
turn them into lumber to build our house. We talked to a few of
our siblings and children throughout the morning but were never
aware that the storm had been turning in our direction. We were
still under the assumption that it was going to the side of us.
At one point my husband and I went out onto our 8 foot porch of
our new home and were viewing the bayou located on the lot in front
of our home and we were making jokes about not having the property
values go up yet due to having waterfront property. A few relatives
and friends had called to tell us that the eye should be coming
through around 1:00 p.m. My father had explained that as the storm
passes over it would push up any water in that area and then as
the eye would pass the water would then start to recede. Well, 1:00
came and went with no incident. We still kept walking to the back
of my parent’s home that was raised and faces the bayou to
check for water. Sometime around 1:20 my husband went to look out
the back window and yelled that it looked as though water was coming
into the yard. By the time he got to the front of the house the
water was lapping the back door. My parent’s home has 6 double
French doors and within 10 minutes the water had come up about 18
inches and it looked like we were visiting an aquarium. That was
when the water started coming in the doors. My father had been sitting
in his usual chair by the dining room table taking in all this commotion.
I told him to get up and get his insulin and other heart, high-blood
pressure medicine together because it looked like we were going
to go under. He told me that he wasn’t going to get up until
the water was up to his chest, and he did just that. My husband
and I jumped on the counter to try and get the fridge open that
was now floating and stuck between the cabinet on top of it and
the one in front of it. We couldn’t get it open.. During this
time the wood floors and furniture were starting to float everywhere
and my mothers 120 lb dog “Freckles” came frantically
swimming in the house. I put Freckles on a sofa that was floating
around and we all got out of the house when there was about 5 inches
of clearance on the door. The water went from floor to ceiling within
20-25 minutes, taking all of our cell phones, except one that I
had put on the ceiling rafters over at our house. Before the storm
we had put my daughters jet ski in front of the house and my son
had the key around his neck. We also had tied off a flat bottom
boat to the only surviving pine tree in the yard that was located
between the garage and our new home. Sometime during the storm,
when the water initially started to rise, my husband brought the
jet ski over to our new home and threw the rope in the second story
window and tied it off to one of the rafters. My son, thinking the
jet ski was in front of the house started down the driveway only
to be swept in the current and he was swept into the top of the
pine trees across the street from my parents home. My Dad is now
holding onto the gutter and my husband has gone to get the jet ski
and flat boat. I tell them I am going to where Janssen is and head
down the driveway holding a metal box my father had given me that
had some coins and cash that he grabbed on the way out the door.
The box was quite heavy and I was having a hard time keeping hold
of the box while trying to maneuver down the drive. When I got across
the street I decided to let the box sink and I would try and find
it again when the water receded. At this point we get the dead silence
that comes with the eye and all we hear are people yelling from
their roof tops. We hear “HELP” and “WE’RE
HERE, HELP US”. From around the corner I hear Mr. Dupree yelling
that he is“ABOUT TO DROWN, PLEASE HELP ME”. He is literally
pleading and he is no “spring chicken”. He is elderly
and has lived in the house most of my life. I decide to swim around
the corner and try to save him. He tells me that he is barely “able
to hold on” and he is going to “drowned” as he
doesn’t swim. As I go around the corner I find myself being
swept down the main road in the neighborhood which has now become
the “river”. I am not dressed appropriate for a hurricane
or any other such disaster as I have on a very short skirt (I had
no business wearing in the first place), a short sleeve t-shirt,
and a pair of terry cloth tennis shoes. The tennis shoes have now
filled with water and I have no control of my feet while trying
to swim, so I kick them off of my feet. In front of Mr. Dupree’s
house there is a limb sticking up about 6 inches in diameter. I
grab onto this limb and hold on. I am now in front of Mr. Dupree’s
house. I can’t see him but I let him know that I am there
and the he “BETTER HOLD ON, SOMEONE IS COMING”. My son
sees this a an opportunity to try out his swimming skills and he
tells me he is coming around the corner after us. He gets caught
in the current and grabs another limb in similar size. At the time
we think that these limbs are caught under cars or some other debris
so we are very careful holding onto them as we don’t want
to dislodge them from wherever they are caught. We tell Mr. Dupree
that they are coming with a boat and he “BETTER HOLD ON”.
He indicates that he can’t hold on much longer. I then hear
a family of eight (I think) that are on the roof of their house,
on my right. It is a one story house and they keep saying that there
are “3 stuck in the attic”. I let them know that help
is coming and to stay put. There are about 4 adults and 4 kids.
At this time my son and I aren’t really afraid, we are just
in “overdrive”. You are in a survival mode and are just
waiting for the next sequence of events. Having no shoes on presents
another round of problems as by this time you are dodging all types
of debris. Everything that is alive is trying to stay afloat. We
are covered in pine needles and bark and fire ants. We are now the
stopping ground for other items as well. We look towards the back
of the neighborhood and see all types of items coming at us. There
are cars, lawnmowers, motorbikes, wood, bikes, limbs, ice chest,
etc. At one point we see a rabbit on a log float by and we see some
turtles. There is a 2 foot fish that keeps swimming around my feet.
The pine needles, ants, and bark are being pushed through our clothes
(yes, even through my bra and underwear) as the current is so strong.
We see my father’s watermelon trailer coming at us about this
time. You see, my father must be a true redneck because who else
would have a watermelon trailer. It is built from the back end of
a Ford track with a hitch on the front. He has these insulated panels
that sit on all four sides and the bottom. He puts watermelons and
ice inside for different church functions and then places a panel
on top. Well this is now coming towards us and stops right between
my son and I. It is about 4 foot above the water level but my son
is so wiry he is able to climb right in. He tries to get me to climb
up there but there is no way that I can lift myself up to this level
and I am still sitting precariously on this limb. About this time
a couple of neighbors come around the corner in their boat to get
us out of the water. I tell them to hurry and get Mr. Dupree instead.
They bring their boat up to his roof and are llifting him into the
boat when I turn around to see a four foot cottonmouth snake to
my right about 18inches from my head. It is coiled and in a striking
position. It is about this time that I start to loose whatever sanity
I have left. I just keep telling the snake in a low tone “just
leave me alone and I’ll leave you alone, just leave me alone
and I’ll leave you alone….” My son has been enjoying
this entire day and tells me that the snake is not going to bother
me to just leave it alone but if it decides to crawl on me, just
let it……I try to get the attention of the guys on the
boat and let them know there is a snake…Of course, they want
to know what kind (does it really matter?). They come over to get
us and I fly in the boat, my son climbs in and the snake goes behind
the trailer. We then maneuver around trees and houses to get to
the family on the roof. We ask them who is stuck in the attic and
they tell us “3 dogs”. Everyone in the boat looks at
me and I tell them that unfortunately we have to save people right
now, not animals. We let them know that we will be back for them
in a few minutes.
In the meantime…..my
husband has had to swim against the current to get to our new house
and literally swim under the garage to get to the second floor.
He unties the jet ski and jumps out the second story window only
to find that he has no key. The current has increased so he remembers
that there is an air hose on the ground that runs from our house
to the garage. He puts the rope to the jet ski in his teeth and
dives under the water and finds the air hose and pulls himself over
to the boat. When he gets to the boat he has to take the engine
cover off to get the water out of the engine in order to start it.
He and my father have no idea that we have been floating down the
middle of the neighborhood as they think we are in front of the
house where the jet ski was originally parked. My father is still
holding onto the gutter. My neighbors bring my son and I over and
we get on the jet ski and get it started. My husband brings the
boat over to the roof of our house and we maneuver my father into
the boat. My son and I then proceed to go check on some neighbors
that we thought had stayed for the storm while the eye is still
passing. They aren’t there so we return. My Dad,husband, my
son and I go over to my fathers shrimp boat that is tied off in
the bayou. My son and I climb on and my father and husband go to
look for some friends that we knew stayed behind in a double-wide
trailer and a metal building. One of the friends is a mechanic and
the other is an elderly man who stays in an apartment at the mechanics
auto shop. Our friend the mechanic, Lester, is about six foot tall
and skinny as a rail. My father and husband get a few others to
safety on the way to the shop. When they are coming towards the
shop they see Lester and Russell (the other gentleman) sitting in
a flatbottom boat waiting for my dad. They had the roof cave in
on the boat and had to lift the metal roof in order to get the boat
out. They were sure that we would come for them and wanted to know
what had taken so long. The most entertaining feature of this whole
rescue experience was Lester’s attire. He had on a bright
blue and yellow neon diving suit that stops at the knees. He also
had on a motorcycle helmet with a face guard. When they drove up
to the shrimp boat my son remarked, “Look, Lester looks just
like a Power Ranger” and he was right!
We waited out
the rest of the storm, mostly on the shrimp boat. At times, because
we were at the end of the bayou and because all the debris was moving
through us, we would have to untangle items from the lines that
were keeping us moored in place. At one time my husband had to get
on a deck and push it out of the lines. Another time he had to maneuver
an entire roof from the lines. We have friends/neighbors who have
a three story home located behind us. The water went up to the top
of the second floor. We knew that the third floor, where her 2 sons
rooms were located, was a dry area. When the water had started to
recede we decided we would go over and get into the upstairs to
find some dry clothing and maybe some bedding for the night. Because
they too are at the end of the bayou, a bunch of the debris had
settled on their second story deck that used to overlook the bayou.
There was about a foot and half of pine straw, squirrels, frogs,
limbs, snakes and other such items on that back deck. We had to
carefully climb over to a small bathroom window (remember, I am
barefoot) and brake the pane so that we can unlock the French doors.
Well, my husband broke the pane and put my son through the window.
When my son opened the doors we found that the whole front of the
other side of the house was gone. We could have just gone around
the front and walked right in. As we were trying to find some water
and food items we found that some of the floor boards under the
carpet were missing and we were stepping on air. We did find some
Kentwood water and a bag of Hershey kisses. We al went upstairs
and laid down on the dry warm carpet. It felt so good to not be
wet or cold anymore. We just lay there for a few minutes then started
rummaging for clothes and things. We found a radio with working
batteries, 3 pillows, and 2 blankets. The clothes were too small
but I was glad to have them. I also found a pair of blue steel toed
boots, a little too big but I was no longer bare foot. As we were
getting comfortable we started hearing a hissing sound. The house
next door had been blown away and there was a natural gas leak.
We had to get out of the house. We took what we found and went back
to the shrimp boat. When the water had gotten down to about 4 foot
deep we took the jet ski back over to the trailer so that it wouldn’t
be laying on the ground when the water went down all the way. My
husband, Janssen and I took the 2 blankets and three pillows and
went over to our second story and tried to sleep with the heat and
mosquitoes. My father and Russell slept on the shrimp boat and Lester
went to his house to try and see what he could salvage.
About 18months
ago a developer built a house in the front of our neighborhood.
He built this house way up on stilts. Everyone wondered why someone
would do this and we could all understand how the house had never
sold. Well, our neighbors who came to get us earlier and gone around
collecting everyone in the neighborhood and that house had about
30 people living in it that first night and I think there are still
people living in it today. They too went scavaging for items that
would be useful such as food and water and bedding.
We all would
meet up at some point during the day time and check on each other
and help each other with what we could. We found peanut butter and
sometimes we could find a loaf of bread and if you were really careful
you could find some dry pieces in the middle. We found some canned
goods on the second day and a can opener. My husband was able to
get my fathers insulin, which was now hot, but he used it. We were
worried about him and Russell as they were both without any of their
medications. By the third day, Lester’s son came into town
and we were able to evacuate. We had 8 people in a small Chevy Blazer.
Most of us had to take off our shoes because they were so full of
mud and stench that it would have made the trip miserable. We were
covered in mud because there was no place to bathe but the bayou.
We stank but were grateful to be alive. We had mixed feelings about
leaving as we were leaving so many of our neighbors still in the
neighborhood. We did leave them all the food and water we could
find and gave some of them cash on the way out of town. We drove
to Pensacola where a very dear friend had every bed in her house
set up and her motor home was plugged in and waiting. When we got
there we sent 5 people in to get showers and Lester, Tommy, and
myself went to Wal-Mart to get everyone at least one outfit to wear
and underclothes and shoes. When we got there the Security guy told
me that Wal-Mart was closed. I got out of the car in my muddy clothes
barefoot. I started crying and begged him to please let me buy some
shoes and clothes. He said “wait just a minute Ma’m”.
I did and he came back and told me to go in and get whatever I needed
and there would be someone waiting at the register to ring me out.
The next morning
I got up at 4:00 a.m. and started making phone calls to get a rental
car and a place to live. I ordered all my fathers meds from CVS.
We had called my Mom the night before and my children to let them
all know that we were alive. All you could hear on the other end
of the phone was sobbing.
I wrote this
so that others could enjoy our Katrina adventure. People have been
so wonderful and giving to all of us. We have been able to see most
of our children and grandchild since the storm at least once. My
Dad is doing great and so are Lester and Russell and their families.
My son enjoyed every minute of the event. We are blessed. Thanks
for your time and hope you enjoyed the adventure. When I get the
time I will write down the experiences that my brother and one of
my daughters encountered. Until then, keep your prayers coming as
they are greatly appreciated.

|