Tuesday, September 30, 2008

The rebuilding effort on Bolivar has only just begun...

This explains our plight, which is the same as hundreds of neighbors and property owners on the Peninsula.   County officials are clearing debris, moving as much as they can and getting the roads cleared and open while utility companies are building power lines and checking water operations.

We cannot do anything on the Peninsula until the infrastructure is back in place and our insurance rules.  FEMA is everywhere down there now and adjustors are working feverishly to get to home sites when in so many cases, nothing is left standing.  Relatives and loved ones continue to look for the missing and stories surface every day concerning the finding of bodies or personal effects.  Really sad and terrible things.

The issues range from coverage at all to what kind of coverage did the homeowner have in place?  If insurance rules in favor of "surge," "rising," or "flood," water damaging the home, many will not be covered depending on the exact wording of the policy.  One person in the field told me that many are scrambling to come up with a verifiable meaning for "surge" water that occurs prior to the hurricane making land.

Ted and I opted for a very good Texas Windstorm policy where we lived, based on information we were given from friends and insurance personnel.  We also had a good homeowners' policy. However, if the adjustor rules for water, we will not be given what we need to rebuild.  The FEMA representative talked to Ted again last night and said that almost every home he had investigated had been ruled "surge" water and that many policies would not have to pay a dime. In our case, he thought FEMA itself might authorize a small amount, or offer a small loan, which means we would not have near enough to rebuild our home, especially in today's market and with the economy as it stands.

We still have not been able to hear from Texas Windstorm and Ted said we are not going to give up until we do, as well as continuing to pursue our homeowner's policy. 

The ruling amounts to a lot of money in our case, so you can see how much we want the adjustor to rule correctly as Ted and many others believe the wind did come first and take down our home prior to Ike ever hitting land or the water rising.  Since there is no structure at all to measure a water line on, no one really knows for certain.  The FEMA man said that they do know that a wall of water at least 18 feet high stood on the Peninsula for a long time.  Can you imagine that?  I can't.

Anyway, keep on praying, please.  We need to get an answer soon and make our plans.  I fully intend to rebuild my home on Bolivar where I am so happy.  I know God is good and that He is always good even when I have trouble remembering that fact.  Also, please join me in prayer for those dear families who live each day to hear what happened to their loved ones.  More than 400, according to our sources,  are still missing from the Peninsula since Ike.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

I appreciate your love, concern and support during these past difficult days.  Friends are truly the angels God appoints to take care of each other during times of need, and how I thank God for each of mine.  It seems that just when I have reached a very low valley, God sends someone along to give me an uplifting word or smile.




Branson is beautiful...

This area is really beautiful.  I cannot remember ever thinking how pretty the Ozarks were like I do now.  Maybe, just maybe, I am beginning to see things more clearly through "not so tired" eyes.  We are enjoying the condo, shopping for groceries and cooking, viewing the area, and we took in one really good show last night.

Hit a couple of potholes yesterday with people and things, but we are survivors, and we will survive again.  (In reality, perhaps they were more like chasms, but I know in my heart that God knows what He is doing).  

So many of my neighbors on the Bolivar Peninsula are hurting with their losses, deaths and heartache that I feel I shouldn't even complain.  A neighbor sent me an interesting article this morning regarding "surge," "rising," and "flood" water versus wind damage to our homes.  These decisions by the adjustors and the government are going to determine whether thousands of good people can rebuild their homes and lives again on the Peninsula.

Here is a link if you are interested in reading the work: http://standeyo.com/NEWS/08_USA/080918.Bolivar.wait.html

Don't want to overtax anyone with hurricane news, but the blog helps to keep from having to tell the story over and over again and yet, I can keep family and friends in the loop as it were.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

Monday, September 29, 2008

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Sunday Evening from beautiful Branson, MO, in the Ozarks...

This place is so beautiful I really cannot describe it efficiently, and I think after getting settled in a bit — just what the doctor ordered (only in this case, it was Ted who ordered the retreat). We are in a really nice condo snuggled on the shores of Tablerock Lake with the Ozarks in the near distance. We got everything put away and drove down into Branson for a little while tonight, but decided to do the shows and shopping later. Did buy groceries and I am so excited about being able to cook in my own (well, sort of) kitchen for the time we are here.

We picked out two shows we want to see and bought tickets for Monday and Wednesday evenings. I also scouted out some shops I want to hit before leaving, too.

Stopped on the way over from Tulsa and visited with Addie Mae and Ron (Ted's cousins whom I had never met) and enjoyed our time with them.

Had a tip when I arrived and opened my computer that the authorities have found two more bodies probably from Bolivar. One cannot be identified as a man or a woman at this time.

Our new insurance adjustor called tonight shortly after we arrived and seemed very nice and professional. Martha has agreed to meet him at our site on Tuesday. The first one did not need to have someone there, but this one said he must have someone there, and Martha (Ted's sister) has known our cabin on Bolivar longer than we have, so we asked her to volunteer and she kindly did. Please pray that this man finds that "wind" and not "water" destroyed our home so that we can rebuild it as soon as possible. So many people are hurting on the Peninsula and stories continue to surface every day about new woes.

The adjustor told me tonight (off the record and not for a story) that he had never seen such devastation and that he had to leave the scene today to compose himself after watching an 76-tear-old woman digging in the sand and muck to see if she could find just one of her possessions. Her house was totally destroyed and she, too, is depending on the windstorm insurance to supply her a home to live in at the beach.

Several reports tonight have come by way of messages about looting with trucks being piled high with tools, copper wire, small crafts, appliances and everything in between. The law enforcement officers are patrolling, but they cannot be everywhere all of the time. I cannot believe unprincipled people would take advantage of folks after a disaster of this size has hit the area.

Please pray diligently about the adjustor's findings. We appreciate it very much.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Late Saturday Night from Tulsa, Oklahoma...


Ted and I decided to "get out of Dodge for a while," as the saying goes. Between Mother's sudden illness and ultimate death, two funeral services, the trip to Georgia under a hurricane evacuation and the return trip to Texas under yet another hurricane evacuation, and the total loss of my home and possessions, as well as working with so many neighbors and friends on the Peninsula who have lost everything, too, we are simply worn out. I've been writing, but I have several more stories that need to be told. I have interviewed five people now who stayed on the Peninsula during the worst storm to hit our area since "The Great Storm of 1900."

And then comes the "fun" task of dealing with insurance and the federal government. I thought I was one tough grandma, but I have decided in the last month I am not very tough at all. Because our house is totally gone and we cannot find any piece of it anywhere other than the five broken pilings on which it sat and the crushed slab of concrete, we have nothing to show the adjustor. Our insurance agent (a very good one) on Galveston Island was also under mandatory evacuation and their offices are badly damaged even when they can safely come back. We cannot get through to any numbers we have for them.

We were told to go ahead and call Texas Windstorm, which is a "biggie" out here, and Lord knows, we've paid those premiums faithfully. Trying to do everything by the book, we did call and went through the whole story one more complete time. He said we would be assigned to an adjustor who would call in two to three days. He did call and we again related the story. He was to go to the slab tomorrow for his "investigation" (what is to investigate I ask), and again, I said, "What part of the story did you not get? There is no house. There are no possessions. If you can find it or them, we'd love for you to do so. We can't and we've tried." Ted and I spent the better part of last Sunday looking for just one thing of ours. After going over the details three different times, he again asked me how high the water mark was on my house and how much of my furniture could I reclaim and use. I held my breath until I was calm enough to speak again. I asked him if he had email and could I please send him the photographs that I personally took so he could see the damages for himself. He gave me the address and I sent them on to him marking our property and house site. I also had to do the paperwork again.

On the way here tonight, the adjustor called and said he had been taken off the Texas cases and we would be assigned a new adjustor. I asked if we had to do the info over again and he said yes. I was glad I was out of town.

Now, here's the real deal. If this adjustor rules that the water (surge, flood, rising) came in first, they, nor homeowners insurance, does not have to pay one dime. If this same man rules that wind came in first, we get paid in full for the house and for the possessions inside the house. The only thing is that now I have to list every possession that we wish to claim for their consideration and the approximate replacement cost. I can't even think about it any longer.

I asked how long we would have to wait for the ruling and he said about three weeks. Now, we cannot do anything on the Peninsula because it is still under guard, so Ted said, "Let's get out of here for a few days." We booked a nice condo in Branson, MO just to rest a bit in the edge of the foothills of the Ozarks. Ted has been several times and loves it there, so send good thoughts our way and we'll get geared up for whatever is next.

And, pray, too, please that we get a "fair" adjustor who will rule wind because that is what Ted and others who know more than I do believe it was. We can see somewhat of a northwestern path, but we have never found one thing that came from the inside of our house. It is the most amazing thing I've ever seen.

The most difficult thing I've been doing is working with the lost and missing families. They have now found two bodies that we know about. One was a beautiful woman who worked for Exxon Mobile Labs. She drowned trying to flee her home and her body was just recovered Wednesday night several miles across the bay caught up in storm debris. Every time a new body is found, all of the other waiting families get their hopes up and wait and worry. There's a lengthy list on several sites of folks who have not been heard from since the storm hit the Peninsula. Laura Recovery Center out of Houston is doing a good job of helping. Glennis Dunn's pic is posted on the blog. Her son, Bill, and his five siblings, have not spoken to her or found any word about her whereabouts since Friday morning before Ike landed on Saturday morning and they fear her dead. She had a 15-year-old Great Dane and Bill believes she would not leave her dog alone to face the storm.

The Galveston County judge has said that many of the missing will possibly never be found because they likely washed out to sea or met with wildlife or fish after drowning. My heart breaks for these families who need closure of some kind.

These are good people who have worked hard all their lives and bought the beach property in many cases with an eye toward retiring and living out their lives in a beautiful environment. Please continue to pray not just for us, but for all of the Bolivar residents who are saddened and have so many decisions to make just now.

I do appreciate each of your kind emails, notes, cards and telephone calls. It has been the source of my strength. God is good and this will all be resolved soon.

Photo I took of Ted at the site of our home the first time we saw the damage of Hurricane Ike on the ground. My children said that when they saw this pic, they knew it was bad because Ted rarely ever gets discouraged about anything. He's been a rock for me and for my family during this time.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Has anyone heard from Glennis Dunn since Hurricane Ike made landfall?



Glennis Dunn, a Crystal Beach resident, has not been heard from since Friday before Hurricane Ike made landfall. Her children and grandchildren are very concerned and are trying various means to locate their mom and grandmom.

As we talk to various friends and neighbors from the Peninsula, mention her name and show the photographs her family has provided in a sincere effort to try to help the family.

According to Glennis' son, Bill, she was last seen on Thursday, Sept. 11 by her neighbor James. Family members spoke with her by phone on Friday morning until the telephone died. She was still in her home at this time.

"Mom was aware of the storm and planned to leave on Friday morning. Unfortunately, at that point," Bill said, "it was too late for her to leave on her own. The wind and water had started to rise."

Glennis has six children and 16 grandchildren.

She was retired and a home-maker; as well as having been a single mom, a private pilot, and an US Air Force captain's wife. For the past 10 years, she was retired and loving living in Crystal Beach with her dog, Jacque. I'm sending another picture of her favorite pastime...hope it helps to jog someone's memory about what may have happened to our loved one.

If you have any information about Glennis Dunn, please email brendacannonhenley@yahoo.com. I will pass on any information I receive directly to her family.

Bolivar Peninsula Residents' Meeting today conducted by Judge Bob Wortham



The meeting in Jefferson County Judge Bob Wortham's courtroom was packed and he was very pleased with the number of interested residents, according to Lynda Kay Makin, the newly appointed Information Flow Chair. Another meeting will be held three weeks from today to continue to address issues. Announcements will be made in time for all to hear.

Wortham's opening statement was, "We are here to get from today to the future." He announced the formation of 13 committees with some chairs having been appointed and others to be chosen from those who signed up on volunteer lists made available in the meeting.

Vernon Pierce, an Entergy representative spoke and said that 98 percent of the customers who lost power from Hurricane Ike's hit had been restored and that the company was working to restore power for the other 8,700 who can take power. (I also received a direct reply from Joe Domino, Entergy Texas' president, regarding the service to Bolivar Peninsula).

Pierce said, "Entergy will not abandon these customers and our workers are doing everything in their power to get service restored." They have dedicated 200 workers to getting power to High Island as soon as possible and hope to have power in Port Bolivar within six weeks since more people are living there.

Jennifer from the water department assured everyone that the BPSUD was up and running even though 14 out of 16 employees lost their homes to the storm. A new temporary office has been located in Winnie to help serve the public. One does not need to have the water turned off and the spokesperson assured the crowd that they are not being billed for this time. Customers' first option is to do nothing until water service is restored. Second option is to call and have service disconnected realizing that fees will be applied to connect again. Any line disconnected will be plugged.

The address of the new office is 524 FM 1406 in Winnie.

Ann Willis and Butch Leger were introduced and Willis stated that the first day she believed residents could go to inspect property was this coming Friday, Sept. 26, beginning at 6 a.m. in the morning. Tetnus shots are suggested, as well as boots, gloves, water and ladders to reach homes. No one will be admitted after 2 p.m. and everyone must be out by 4 p.m. Residents must have proof of ownership and a photo identification and will cross over the Rollover Pass bridge.

Wortham asked the crowd, "Do you want to work to rebuild Bolivar? If so, find a committee and sign up letting organizers know you are available." He announced the following committees have been formed.

Information Flow (with Entergy info being routed through this committee)
Property Clean Up
Water Issues
TXDot
Galveston City (chaired by Wortham)
A new EDC
Housing
FEMA
Legislation
Insurance
Tax
Galvestion and High Island ISD

He urged residents who have not been on the Peninsula since the hurricane "to prepare themselves for the worst and be happy and surprised at the best." He further said he was overwhelmed with Channel 6 in Beaumont asked him to go see his own cabin with a news crew. He also thanked the large crowd, which filled the Jefferson County Jury Impaneling Room to overflowing, for their "civilized manner" in a "standing room only" crowd where everyone had a vested interest in the Peninsula.

Wortham also cautioned front row home owners not to plan to build within one full year (four seasons) so government agencies could assess the shore line and see where the tide lines would fall after the storm.

Roger Welch, a member of the BPSUD, assured the crowd of his belief that DPS troops were actively protecting the property there. He said there were ten cars patrolling the Peninsula today.

Residents were further urged to remain patient and calm and to realize that many people were working to secure the Peninsula and to help in the huge task that lay ahead in the rebuilding of our homes.

From Beaumont, Texas in our RV


Things are beginning to take on somewhat of a routine and we are safe in the RV in Beaumont. Ted's sister and brother in law have acreage here and we can enjoy their yard now that it is being cleaned up from Hurricane Ike.

Ted and I were allowed on Bolivar Peninsula on Sunday due to my National Press Pass and an Emergency Management hologram provided by my boss. I am a writer and I cannot describe adequately the destruction and devastation we saw on our beloved Peninsula. It is so much worse than the fly-over in the chartered plane showed. When you walk across the site that used to be your home and you can find nothing of your possessions, it is mind boggling.

There is still no water and no power and much discussion as to whether or not insurance will or will not pay off at this time. Friends report that even though they had flood insurance, as well as homeowner's and the required Texas Windstorm, at least two have been told that the policy did not cover "surge water," which is what Hurricane Ike brought in to our area. Ted believes that the windstorm will have to pay for our house because it was clear (to him, at least) that the wind came first and knocked the cabin off the pilings before the 13-15 feet wall of water hit.

I have interviewed four people now that stayed out the storm on the Peninsula and they have tales to tell. People are continually reported missing and have not been heard from since the storm. Officials stated that they might have been washed out to sea clinging to their houses or floating objects

I posted 123 photographs that I took on Sunday on the Peninsula if you'd care to see them. Please simply email and I will send you the necessary invitation to view the pics. Don't want to overload anyone's in-box with material that they don't want.

I am attaching a recent photo of "the Stancil clan" taken at Mother's memorial service in Groves. We're all there except for my precious Nikki, Steve and the boys. Included in the pic is Kelley Nolan, the young lady who helped us so much in the care of Mother.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

One piece of good news...


Ted and I learned yesterday that our mail was packed up prior to Ike's visit and taken to another post office about 45 miles from our home. We went there to retrieve it, but the postmaster said she had not had time to unpack the large cartons, but would try to do so by Monday afternoon.

One reason I had worried and fretted about the mail is that family members and friends had mailed checks for the education scholarship fund we established in Mother's memory and I did not know how to acknowledge the gifts or send them to the bank.

The postmaster assured me that all mail is accounted for and that took a load off of our minds. We are still to use the old address of Post Office Box 323, Port Bolivar, Texas 77650 and the post office will take care of the forwarding for some time until we all know what we can do toward rebuilding.

Ted and I are safe in our RV in Beaumont and got power late this afternoon. Yeah! We have determined that very cold showers are very quick showers! Tonight, we can have warm showers for the first time since arriving back in Southeast Texas and I can make fresh coffee in a traditional manner for my husband in the morning.

Please keep on praying for us and for our area. There are many needs and so many people without housing and other necessities of life. We were able to fly over the area in a private, charter plane day before yesterday and confirm that our house and possessions are gone. Tomorrow, if all goes well, my boss and publisher and I will visit the Peninsula by land to get our first up close and personal look. Everyone reports that it is indeed devastating.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Dealing with loss, death, tragedy and disaster in our lives


Editor's Note - This is my current column for The Examiner, published in Beaumont, Texas.

Please forgive me if my column today is a little more personal than usual. When my editor and publisher asked me to write a story of encouragement and help for folks dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Ike on our area, I thought, “Sure, piece of cake. That is what I do. Been doing it for years.”

But I soon realized that I had to draw upon the deep recesses of my heart and soul to put words on paper describing the brutal truth of the matter and to express honestly the thoughts churning so vividly inside my own being. Perhaps a little background is in order here.

My mother, Flo Davis, suffered a massive stroke on Wednesday evening, August 13 after eating dinner with one of her close buddies and attending prayer meeting. She was rushed to the trauma unit of CHRISTUS St. Elizabeth Hospital in Beaumont and the family members and church friends began to gather for a long vigil in the surrounding waiting rooms. We were told that Mother had suffered the stroke, additional seizures and that she likely would not survive more than six or eight hours. As we stood near her bed, we watched in amazement as she fought and survived that night.

The next day our family was advised that not only had she had the massive stroke and the continued seizures, she had also had a heart attack and since she was 86 years old, there really was nothing more to be done. She had a strong living will and a DNR order on file and so we said our goodbyes in different ways and at different times. On Sunday our team of physicians came in and said that the final test had revealed a growing cancerous brain tumor, stage 4, that had likely caused the stroke and the seizures. We discussed hospice care and placed Mother into that program on Monday. She lived 13 days and nights without one drop of water and one bite of food as we watched, prayed and tried to remain strong. Watching her die was not an easy chore and she was a strong woman.

Being of sturdy stock and a compelling nature, Mother lived 19 minutes into her 87th birthday and went home to be with the Lord and her husband, mother, father and other family members and friends. I rather think she did it like she wanted to do it — making it until that birthday milestone. We planned a memorial service at my son’s church in Groves and while we were conducting that funeral, we learned we were under mandatory evacuation for Hurricane Gustav. As we left the church, workers were placing sandbags around the doors of the building.

We drove on to the Atlanta area where Mother spent the majority of her life and had a second memorial service there on Sept. 3. As my husband and I were making our way home to Texas after the service and taking care of some of Mother’s business and going through personal effects, we learned that another major storm was heading for the Southeast Texas coast and that we would be under a second mandatory evacuation from our home in Port Bolivar. We were never allowed back to our property and only had with us the clothing we took for the funeral and my nephew’s wedding, which followed on September 6. Hurricane Ike slammed into the Peninsula we had come to love and called home since our marriage, and for four days and nights, we did not know if we had a home or any possessions at all. Waiting it out to confirm or deny our thoughts was a most difficult time. On Wednesday, Sept. 17, Ted and I flew in a small, chartered plane over Bolivar Peninsula and confirmed what some aerial photographs had shown us. Not one shred of our home was standing and not one piece of our belongings — a book, a piece of jewelry, dishes, photographs, wedding album, tools, lawn mower, furniture was evident. It looks as though a giant machine swept the area clean in many areas and flung the contents out to the beautiful blue-green sea.

A slight wind was blowing from the north and the seascape was picturesque. The landscape, however, was quite a different story. Homes and businesses are gone, the Rollover Ferry bridge has been destroyed except for one lane that is partially there, and the Galveston-Bolivar Ferry landings have been breached. Friends and neighbors appear to be missing and there are widespread rumors of hurtful situations. Little information has been forthcoming about when residents may be allowed back onto the Peninsula to look for any of their belongings and we wait in areas without water and power.

As I drove into my sister-in-law’s home in Bevil Oaks, I saw a big, old oak tree that the storm had taken down here. The inside was quite hollow and you could literally see through the massive trunk. I thought for a moment, “That’s how my heart feels. Hollow. Empty. Open and vulnerable. Useless.” For a woman to be without clothes, jewelry and shoes and her photographs of a lifetime is almost unthinkable, but for me, the loss of my books is cause for deep pain. My office equipment where I wrote is gone. My children’s gifts have vanished. I cried over a particular seashell that I dearly loved.

In my overwhelming grief, I began to think. “Do I believe what I have declared and taught for a lifetime? Is God really on His throne? Does He know my heart, as well as those of many of my dear friends and neighbors, hurts? Does He know what His plan is for our lives and will He be there to help guide us through it?” Thank God, I know in my heart of hearts, He does, but I found myself physically tired, discouraged and bereft.

While in Atlanta, another of my sister-in-laws asked me to go and buy a particular book and read it and then let her know what I thought. For some reason, I took the time, went to a busy Atlanta area bookstore and bought “The Shack” by Wm. Paul Young. I was entranced and read every word of it in one sitting. I have now read it a second time and I do not know what you may believe about the writing, but it helped me more than I can say. I needed to be reminded of the personal relationship human beings can have with God the Father, Jesus, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. I gleaned from the many writers of the past that Young quoted and found myself clinging to their words just as surely as neighbors of mine clung to pieces of wood as they floated on Ike’s raging waters.

Let me share just a few of the outstanding quotes, which have helped to hold my personal anchor in place the past few days. Mack, the central character in “The Shack” had experienced “The Great Sadness” in his life and was forced to learn to rely on his personal relationship with God. He said, “Two roads diverged in the middle of my life, I heard a wise man say. I took the road less traveled by and that’s made the difference every night and every day.” - Larry Norman with apologies to Robert Frost. In Chapter 8 of “The Shack,” Young quotes an unknown writer: “Growth means change and change involves risk, stepping from the known to the unknown.” “New world — big horizon. Open your eyes and see it’s true. New world — across the frightening waves of blue.” - David Wilcox. “Whoever undertakes to set himself up as a judge of truth and knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods.” – Albert Einstein. “Oh, my soul…be prepared for Him who knows how to ask questions.” - T. S. Eliot. And, one of my personal favorites in the book, “God is a verb,” a quote from Buckminster Fuller.

Mack had many struggles to overcome in his search for truth and in one place he was told, “You can kiss your family and friends goodbye and put miles between you, but at the same time, you carry them with you in your heart, your mind, your stomach, because you do not just live in a world, but a world lives in you.” - Frederick Buechner. I am learning that this is also true of possessions and the “things” of life. You can keep them through your memories and by remembering those that gave them to you in the first place.

A. W. Tozer, one of my favorite writers of the past, is also included in “The Shack.” Here, he writes, “An infinite God can give all of Himself to each of His children. He does not distribute Himself that each may have a part, but to each one He gives all of Himself as fully as if there were no others.” God loves you and He loves me as if we were the only children He had. We humans tend to limit Him so much because we are human. We are reminded that “earth has no sorrow that Heaven cannot heal.”

As I walked about the branches of the dead oak tree today, I chanced to see something growing on one of the branches. I reached down and looked more closely. There I found several little healthy looking acorns resting quietly as if nothing had happened to disturb their world. They appeared to me to be at perfect peace. I picked one for myself (the tree is going to be cut up and taken away today), one for my husband and one for each of my children and grandchildren, and I put them in my pocket. As I have worked today, I am claiming a wonderful new experience called life for each of us, and the tiny acorns are my personal symbols of hope. I needed something tangible to touch and feel. Things can be replaced — people cannot. I can get new shoes, new clothing and some other books and my life will be brighter, more productive and happier than ever before, if (big if, here) I allow God to make it so.

As an added bonus, (just like God to do this for His children) as I was walking toward our RV parked in Bill and Martha’s branch littered yard, I looked for her wonderful, old gardenia bush. Much of it was crumbled in disarray from Ike’s powerful wind, but as I picked up some of the branches, I saw one beautiful, creamy white gardenia bloom nestled amidst the brokenness. I carefully and tenderly broke it off and brought it inside with me to share its fragrance and hope throughout our lives. It reminded me, as Mack learned, God is indeed still on His throne and He does care for us. (I Peter 5:7) It is up to His children to learn to trust Him completely, even when we don’t understand, and walk by faith in His ways making certain our relationships with those around us are ones He can be pleased with for all eternity. He is good and He is always God. Be encouraged.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

From our RV in Beaumont, Texas

Ted and I returned to the Beaumont area last night to find much of the city and surrounding bergs still without electricity. Bevil Oaks, where Martha, Ted's sister, lives has no power and the Entergy Web site said that full power would be restored no later than October 6. We do have a generator built into the RV so we are better off than many of our neighbors.

My publisher kindly provided a chartered plane for Ted and I to fly over Bolivar Peninsula today to see for ourselves the damage done there by Hurricane Ike. It is almost impossible for me to describe the sights or the impact it has on one whose home was there and who has friends among the missing.

Rumors continue to fly and are being confirmed by different sources and each appears to be more horrible than the last. We do know for certain that an "order to vacate" the entire Peninsula was issued night before last and that marshall law will begin tomorrow where National Guard and other military will go door-to-door in an attempt to identify the missing and/or the dead. So many of the "old-timers" simply refused to leave their homes again. They were worried about looters and many did not really believe Ike would be that bad. It was!

I was told late this afternoon by a business owner on the Peninsula that the number of missing is now 504 and that the body count continues to climb, although all national media and even local media cannot report that. We do understand that the officials and the county leaders do not want to speculate and they say they will not have proof until the count is completed by the military. We are hearing of people that have been found dead, some floating in the still evident water. One sheriff's deputy told me last night that it is awful there and that the body count is much higher than we can imagine. He also mentioned that there is a real problem with the wildlife habitat and that it is literally turned upside down. One fear surrounding the identifying of the dead is that the alligators are coming out and eating the bodies so the urgency continues to grow daily. It has also been reported that more than 1,500 head of cattle are dead on the Peninsula and that health risks are severe in this matter.

One story surfaced today that seemed utterly impossible, but turned out to be quite true. It seems that a man living on Crystal Beach had a full-grown lion as a pet and when he was made to evacuate, he refused to leave without his lion, so he took it to shelter at the local Baptist church with at least five other individuals. The lion did just fine chained in a room until he ran out of food and some of his co-evacuees grew fearful. A vet went down today and tranquilized the large cat and they were able to get it out of the church without incident. I know this story to be true because we talked with a man who was on the plane.

Galveston Island is under mandatory evacuation after President Bush's visit there. Buses were taking some 20,000 citizens out of the city.

I do know for a fact, because we saw it with our own eyes today from the chartered plane, that there are strips of beach
front property that are stripped absolutely clean. It is as if huge bulldozers cleared the land for building. What is also incredible to observe is that there is no discernible pattern. The front row of houses might be gone, one standing in the second row and the third row completely bare. On one stretch of Crystal Beach, all of the houses were gone except for one lone sentinel standing on a point out into the Gulf. The beaches were swept clean in many areas and only a few spots of debris could be seen from our height in the surf. Water was beautiful with a slight north wind blowing.

The old Bolivar Lighthouse, that we could see out of our kitchen window, is sitting in the middle of lake now that was not there prior to the storm. It looks as though it survived another storm and is still standing tall.

When we got to the area where our house stood, there was nothing. I kept hoping to see a picture, a book, a shiny piece of jewelry, some dishes, anything at all, but I saw nothing but bare land. My little white Grand Am is sitting in the middle of a lake we never had before and we believe Ted's new lawn mower is resting beside the car. It looks as though the area were hollowed out and filled with still-standing water. Nothing else remains. In many cases you can see the concrete pads that houses were built on before Ike hit. Ted and others are convinced the high, unrelenting wind took our cabin down.

Many do not remember that we did not evacuate as such. We were in Atlanta for my Mom's funeral when the call for evacuation came. We were never allowed by law back on the Peninsula so what we own is what we had in our car for the trip to Georgia. We are more fortunate than many because Ted has the nice RV and a home in Amarillo should we want to go there. However, my life and my worldly possessions, as were many of his, were in the beach house, which was our primary residence since our marriage.

I do pretty well for long periods of time and then I remember one particular thing, a gift, a book of which I was especially fond, something I had written, a ring or a bracelet that someone gave me, my children's pictures, my wedding pictures or something else that pulls at my heart strings. Somehow in the back of my mind, I keep thinking, "We will go home soon and I will buy groceries, stock the kitchen and cook a big, good meal," and then it hits me, "Our home is gone."

God is always good and He is always God. I do not see the end picture in all of the things that have happened in our lives in the past 30 days, but I do know that He is faithful and He will not leave us, nor forsake us. Our bodies are weary, our hopes are a bit dashed and we are a bit unsettled, but we will survive and we will be happy again. We have each other, our families are safe and we are Texans! My brother-in-law, Bill Ladd, encouraged me tonight to read Psalm 71 and I have read it now several times. It seems fitting to me.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

I have new photographs and will post them as soon as I can get them on the Web.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Monday Morning from Gulf Shores, Alabama

It has now been over 50 hours since Hurricane Ike made landfall on the Bolivar Peninsula and Galveston Island and changed our lives forever. Reports are coming from all sides of danger, destruction and death. The county judge in Galveston County issued an "order to vacate" for Bolivar last night and it is now illegal for any living thing to be on the Peninsula. They say it is simply too dangerous because of the standing water, debris, loss of roadways, no water or power and no infrastructure left. The order indicates that the officials are not certain if and when the Peninsula will be rebuilt.

The judge said that 90% of everything is gone or badly damaged and some rescues by both the US Coast Guard and the Galveston County Sheriff's Department are still being done. I spoke with the Coast Guard commander this morning and he said that those who refused to leave prior to the storm were foolish and that, even now, some of the old timers, say they will not leave. They are now being arrested by law enforcement to try to save their lives. Over 3,000 people have been rescued by the Coast Guard alone including all of Galveston County and the Peninsula.

I have photographs this morning of caskets floating in Orange County due to the standing water literally popping them out of the ground. They are floating in the town itself.

The most terrible part of it all is the waiting. Ted and I do not know for certain if our land was wiped clean or if there is a slim possibility that part of the cabin might still be standing. Reports have come in both ways, but we have seen no conclusive proof of it being there. The worse thing is that no one can get in to see for certain, so we wait here in Gulf Shores. We are safe and comfortable, but it is difficult to enjoy the beauty of the area.

Thank you for your love and concern. Until the next page turns,
Brenda

Sunday, September 14, 2008

With heavy heart, I write from Gulf Shores, Alabama...




First photo above shows a stretch of Crystal Beach on the Bolivar Peninsula, formerly heavily populated with houses and people, now empty, swept clean by Hurricane Ike. Second is a photo of my beloved Bolivar lighthouse that I could see from my kitchen window. It is now completely surrounded by water in what was a green field. Mother especially loved seeing the beam from the Bolivar Light coming on each night as dusk gathered.


Ted and I had planned to start for Beaumont so we could be nearer to our home on Bolivar Peninsula, but were turned back by the genuine advice from several truckers we met along the way. There are places that are still under water on I-10. We had secured motel reservations for both DeAnna and Callie and ourselves in San Antonio, but were told we could not get there because I-10 was closed at the Trinity River Bridge because of water and some other areas of concern. We have since returned to our new little home, away from home, in beautiful Gulf Shores, Alabama.

All news we hear coming from Bolivar Peninsula (and it is continuing hourly by phone and computer) indicates that there is nothing left of what we knew as home. One rescued man said, "Everything on Bolivar Peninsula is gone, except for a little bit of High Island." He added, "Not only have we lost our homes, our cars, our possessions, but we have also lost our way of life as we know it as well."

Rumors are swirling and because no one can get in there to see for themselves what is true and what is not, we simply must wait. One set of arial photographs we have seen taken by a property and business owner there confirms what we feared — all is gone. He described such destruction and debris as we've only seen in horror movies and after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. This gentleman is a pilot and he took his own airplane up to view the damage for himself because he found what he was hearing hard to believe.

The new middle school built a few miles from our home is gone, the Crystal Beach Post Office appears to be standing, all homes are gone, cars were swept out to sea, along with belongings, furniture, memories of a lifetime and lawn mowers and tools. The wind toppled the houses off the piers or pilings and the water took the contents out to sea when the surges receded. I've never felt such emotion as when I think of a grandchild's gift to me, a particular book I treasure, papers of a lifetime, photographs, my dishes, and etc. I was doing OK for a while today until I realized my Mama Cole's Bible and her bread bowl and combs were gone, as was my good Scrabble game.

We are also hearing that the insurance companies are devious when it comes to paying off and will try to shift the causes of the disaster from one thing to the other. We've not met a FEMA person or learned of any help as of yet, but it is still so soon after Ike's pounding. The national media rarely mentions Beaumont and much less Bolivar Peninsula. They seem to be concentrating on Galveston, Houston and of all places, Surfside, with only 800 residents at the peak of summer. But, of course, no one can get on the Peninsula by boat or air and certainly not by car since all roads are still under water.

We have been told by the county officials that the ferry landings are gone and that they do not know how long it might take for them to be replaced. The road is also gone in several places with great chunks pushed around. Our faithful old lighthouse that I could see from my kitchen window stands, but in the center of a big lake of water.

Please continue to pray for us as we cannot plan to return to even Beaumont until the curfews are lifted and they have power and water. I know in my heart that God is still on His throne and is over all things, but sometimes I find myself getting discouraged. For a "keeper of things," this is challenging.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Saturday Afternoon from Gulf Shores, Alabama

Ted has just spoken with Tony Reed, a Crystal Beach resident, (next little town to us on the Peninsula) who is an employee of Texas Parks and Recreation. He took part yesterday in a rescue of 60 people stranded at Fort Travis (immediately next to our property on Bolivar). These people are "old-timers" who vowed to ride out the storm as they have done in the past at the fort, but water came in too high, too quickly. The rescued were just above water when they got to them. Water was coming over the seawall around the fort and I know it is high since it was built to protect the military from both storm and attack. (Steven - This is the high wall you climbed at the fort next to us - Water was over that so you know how high that was/is.)

He said at that time (around 2 p.m. yesterday, Friday) he could only see about 8 houses standing around or near the fort (not a good report) and he said the water had risen to the top of the bottom floor of the little motel by the fort. Water was inside and flowing through the Mexican restaurant we like on Bolivar. Said it was rising quickly inside the building and we think it is on a slight rise. There are dozens of homes/cabins around the fort so 6-8 houses standing is not a good thing.

He said water was all over the Peninsula - roads, beaches and yards - and is still standing.

No one can get in to evaluate because of the high water and there are not many hotels/motels available from the Texas line to throughout Louisiana and Alabama where we are staying. We are staying put in Gulf Shores for tonight and tomorrow.

Take care, stay safe until the next page turns,


Brenda (or Mom)

Brenda Cannon Henley

Saturday Morning, September 13, 2008, following Ike

Dear Family and Friends,

Thank you for your calls and emails concerning our safety and property damage due to Mighty Ike that made landfall just east of Galveston at 2:10 a. m. this morning.

We really do not know much more than anyone else who is watching the television coverage because no one can get onto the Peninsula to evaluate the damage there. Flooding is still taking place all over the area as far as we can tell and news crews and camera men and women are not allowed to go there because of safety issues.

We've heard during the night that the entire strip of land (Bolivar Peninsula) has been under water since early yesterday and we know the TXDot ferry is not running between Galveston Island and the Peninsula. One of the news reporters on The Weather Channel has just said the entire Galveston Island is "under water," but that sounds to me like a bit of exaggeration. We do know Houston has much flooding and Beaumont and Port Arthur are still being pounded by 90-100 MPH wind. All reports indicate that the storm will hover for a while and areas upward of Beaumont can expect more wind and rain, plus the rising waters coming from all sources of water, rivers, bayous, lakes and the Gulf.

Most of the major national coverage has centered on Houston, Galveston proper and a small village, Surfside,with just under 800 people living there, where a team of reporters were set up for the duration of the storm. Galveston Island has had major damage to property and particularly the beautiful old historic district including The Strand and all along the seawall.

We've seen three pictures of scenes on Bolivar, but they were taken yesterday during the surge prior to Ike's landing. We are wondering what we own and have.

Until the next page turns,
Brenda

Friday, September 12, 2008

Ted and I are safe in Gulf Shores, Alabama for now



Hello family members and friends,

Where do I begin? For a woman of words, I find that I have few to describe the last days of my life. As most of you have read or heard, Mother became ill after a prayer meeting service, was taken to the hospital where she died after a 13-day battle, and we discovered that she had a massive brain tumor that was cancerous and had already spawned a second tumor. She also suffered a heart attack and 12-14 additional seizures. She made it 19 minutes into her big 87th birthday. We held her memorial service in Groves at Brent's church and found ourself under mandatory evacuation orders with the buildings being sand-bagged during the funeral. We left immediately for Georgia for a second memorial service among family and friends of a lifetime, attended my nephew's wedding and started home to the Texas coast.

Millie Jones Pincus, my gracious friend from elementary school days, shared wonderful southern hospitality with us for our stay in Atlanta and we had time with Ginger Bragg Doster, another long-time friend, and my sister-in-law, Teresa Stancil, as well as Aunts Anna and Minnie and Uncle Donald, cousins and close friends. I also took Ted to eat at the world famous Varsity, my favorite Steak and Shake and the new, old Rio Vista in Jackson.

As we drove through Alabama, we began receiving calls from friends on Bolivar Peninsula telling us that we were under mandatory evacuation orders once again — this time from Ike, the Terrible. Not wanting to face the Houston evacuation of more than 6 million people, we dipped down to beautiful Gulf Shores, Alabama, where we were able to secure a nice little hotel suite that is quite comfortable and very clean. We went to the beach yesterday only to find massive waves and much swirling and churning of the water here. Locals said the water had never been this rough, not even during Ivan, the terrible storm they remember too well. Returning this morning, we found it rougher and more turbulent and remember Gulf Shores Beach is some 250-260 miles from the actual storm in the Gulf. Gulf Shores has now had flooding of the beach road and other properties, but we are four miles inland and are safe.

Reports from home are not good. All living creatures have been evacuated off of Bolivar, according to an officer with the Galveston County Sheriff's Department, with whom I spoke this morning. When we talked around 8 a.m., she said we had water more than five or six feet deep on the highway behind our house and that it was rising rapidly. Officials are predicting that Ike will be worse than "the great storm of 1900" because of the surges, which are now predicted at over 20-25 feet. Much of Galveston Island (four miles across the bay from us) is already under water now and the seawall will not keep it back. Port Arthur and Beaumont and all of the Southeast Texas coast is in for a direct hit by the eye of the storm if it doesn't change soon. Landfall is now predicted for somewhere around 2 a.m. on Saturday, September 13. We have been led to believe to expect "complete devastation" of all we own. When we left the beach cabin for Mother's funeral, we only took with us what we felt we needed for the trip. I cannot explain my emotions, but we will survive, God willing.

I will keep the blog updated to let our family and friends know what is happening as we know. However, Ted says we will not be allowed back on the Peninsula until the water subsides, which will take several days and nights. DeAnna and Callie Grace are in Dallas with Jeff's aunt, Martha is in the Dallas area with her daughter, and Brent and family are in Louisiana at a church camp as I understand it at this time. All are accounted for and are safe for now.

Thank you for your calls, prayers, emails and kind words of encouragement. Sincerely, and until the next page turns,
Brenda

The pictures are taken at the beach at Gulf Shores, Alabama, some 250-260 miles from the storm itself. It was a "majestic fury" unfurled with each wave.