I have been hesitant to post this as I did not want to depress anyone that was sitting in wait for Irma to arrive. I got my first peek of the devastation left behind by Irma on Florida. It was bad, I am not sure if it was a bad as I really expected but, those were just the first photos!! Don't get me wrong what I have seen, was bad but they haven't gotten into many areas!! I am sure some areas are completely gone!
My heart goes out to all effected by Irma. Until you have been through it, you have no idea! Their are homes that were never re-built, businesses, that never came back! I can still show you today of reminders of Ivan. Hurricane Ivan hit back in 2004! Living after the storm is difficult, to say the least! We watched power restored to many neighbor hoods and our was one of the last! Living on a generator and cooking what food didn't spoil on my fish cooker. Hauling water just to be able to bathe, flush the toilet became the morning chore. And do not, do not waste and ounce of precious water. What you bathe in can flush a toilet. The first day after the storm. I walked the street I live on to check on my neighbors and to invite them to my house to eat, I was cooking everything in the fridge. We had a feast and many of them returned the favor later on!!
The days drudgery was almost always the same. Once you got the water and feed everyone. Everyone went out to spend the entire day cutting up trees and clearing away the brush. I had no phone so on the third day I made a trip to the insurance company to see about getting started on that process I had two vehicles totaled and one more damaged. Then it is back to the jobs at hand picking up things in the yard that belonged to you and finding things that you have no idea who they belonged to. I live in the county but it is a small subdivision on this dead-end street. When I moved here I was one of three houses. Now there is a dozen houses. Since I live at the end of the street and my 1 1/4 acres is pie shaped with the point of the pie to the street. The county said pile all the storm debris at the right of way, to your property. I had no right of way so of the 25 trees that had either fell or I decided to take down due to damage. I had to haul all of it to the dump, about 5 miles from where I live. I had a 10 x 28 ft. trailer at the time so welded some stanchions on it and used the plywood from the windows to build it up about 3' high!! I'd work til it got so dark I could no safely work anymore to have the trailer loaded. I passed the water job off to the kids and I got up and drove to the dump every morning and emptied the trailer, (not a dump trailer) so you handled everything twice. I hauled 16 loads off of my property on that trailer and I usually had it packed above the 3' sides! We raked the yards, made temporary repairs, more permanent, made gas runs for gas for the generator, ice runs, fought with insurance companies and that is how the first three weeks went. By that time they had some of the bridges repaired and we could get out and see the rest of the world and that is when I found out how truly blessed I was!!
Some areas it will be years before they come back and they will never look as they did before! Hang in there everyone and when it looks the darkest remember you got yourselves and your family and your faith. Without faith the everyday things will tear you apart!! Do what you can for today and there will always be tomorrow! Love your family and you will get by!!
Oh and be careful with those chain saws, and other cleanup! I saw my neighbors father handling a bow saw and it kicked back. My neighbor had been waiting behind him, as the saw spun his father around he caught my neighbor in the leg and foot. Thank God we are only a few minutes from the hospital or he might not have made it!!