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wiring harness

Discussion in 'Shelby Mustang List' started by Guest, Oct 4, 2005.

  1. Guest

    Guest Guest

    This is a little off the subject of Shelbys, but I could use a little of that knowledge floating around out there. A 1966 Mustang GT, does it have the same wiring harness as a 66 Mustang V-8. I am specifically wondering how they handled the fog lite wires. Were they simply added along side the harness or was a different harness available in the GT with the fog lite wires inside the wraping? Need a little help here. THANKS SEE Y'ALL
     
  2. Jeff Fox

    Jeff Fox Guest

    Diary of a "Rita" Evacuee - "The Rest of the Story"

    This is off topic, but it definitely has to do with motor vehicles !!! If
    you'd like to get some insight into the evacuation, the please see below ...

    ------------------------------------------------------

    This is long, but maybe an interesting read for you. If you want an inkling
    of what the largest evacuation in U.S. history was like, then read on ...



    What follows is a diary of a tiny slice of the plight of the "Evacuees
    Running from Hurricane Rita". I wanted to take a look at the preparation
    and evacuation angle as most eyes are usually focused on the storm and
    tragic aftermath.



    People and Vehicle Report



    1 mile = 5,280 ft

    1 avg. vehicle + space between another vehicle = ~ 25'

    Assume about 2 people per car, but usually more

    Assume 3 lanes of traffic one way, but many times up to 4 and 5 and
    sometimes fewer



    Continuing ...



    5280 ft / 25 ft = ~ 211 vehicles per mile x 2 people = 422 people per mile x
    3 lanes = 633 vehicles and 1266 people per mile



    Now .... consider that there were approximately 4 or 5 evacuation routes
    (say 4.5), then you have 2848 vehicles and 5697 people



    What does this mean? An unwanted Guiness Book of World Records Award that I
    never wanted to be in.



    The clincher .... consider many if not all of these evacuation routes were
    backed up for about 100 miles !!!!!!! and all at the same time!



    Finishing with the math ...



    2848 vehicles X 100 miles = 284,800 vehicles !!! (and I didn't see one
    Shelby lol, that was the only humor there was)

    5697 people x 100 miles = 569,700 people !!! (probably closer to 700,000)



    Above are just my crude estimates of the amount of people and vehicles that
    moved through Houston at any given moment during my 30 hr escape! Many,
    many more passed the same way in the hours preceding and after me.



    The estimates over the day and a half exodus are about 2 million and I
    believe that's about right (it sure felt like it).





    Time & Mileage Report



    I left my house at about 9:30 pm on Wed. evening. Downtown Houston is 17
    miles from my house; about a 25 min. trip on an average day. So I think it
    will be slower than that, but nothing like I would ever have imagined. 6
    hrs 30 min. later I make it to downtown Houston ! (just 17 miles). Whewww
    .... That's got to be the worst of it, so I think. I keep on. All I need to
    do is get to Mile marker 81 on the I-45 freeway; just 33 more miles (I can
    do it). I'll cut to the chase and you can read the whole story below, a
    mere 30 hrs after I leave my home I see my exit! 30 hrs and just 50 miles
    traveled. It was absolutely an incredible mostly unreported story. If you
    watched the Weather Channel you may have seen me interviewed on the side of
    the freeway putting gas in my car with one of my two "full" gas cans that I
    was lucky enough to bring along.



    I used about 23 gallons of gas over the course of 50 miles; for about a
    whopping 2 miles per gallon.





    Meet me on the Freeway, 'er I mean the Parking Lot (Below is a more
    detailed diary of the exodus) ...



    Tues. 9/20



    ~ 2:00 pm - While at work we begin thinking it might be a good idea to
    cancel our Wed. meeting and while were at it maybe Thurs. and Fri. too;
    good, no meetings, don't like them that much anyway.



    ~ 4:45 pm - I leave work and decide to top off my gas tank (My daily driver
    is a 1992 Cadillac Sedan DeVille that does not get very good mileage). I
    then think, hey, I should stop by and get a haircut in case they're out of
    comission for a while.



    ~ 5:30 pm - I make the most important decision; I grab my 2.5 gallon
    lawnmower gas can and a 5 gallon gas can that I used to fill the Shelby when
    I was having some carburetor problems many months back. I always wanted to
    get rid of that can because it was in the way, but what a life saver.



    ~ 6:15 pm - My parents live close by and ask me to help board the windows,
    hmmm, they're getting serious. I leave for home, but before I do I ask them
    if I can have their small walkie talkies I bought them a few years ago
    (unknown to me it would be an important decision).



    ~ 7:00 pm - I decide that maybe I should board up too; I'll get up early the
    next morning





    Wed. 9/21



    ~ 8:05 am - Dad arrives to help me board up my house; I continue bringing in
    things that might blow around (like patio furniture!)



    ~ 10:00 am - All my neighbors in my cul-de-sac are out. They are making a
    list of everyone's cell and home phone numbers.



    ~ 11:15 am - Mom and Dad drive by my house on the way out of town; Mom is
    worried I might want to stay because of my Shelby; I'm worried that it will
    either be flooded, stolen or looted



    ~ 11:16 am - I run through a mix of emotions from feeling angry and sickened
    to rattled nerves. I finally start moving furniture in the house. I wrap a
    few things in plastic, move some furniture in front of the door in a futile
    attempt to keep the wind from opening it. As I keep this up I'm getting
    more irritated and realize that I probably should get out.



    I then take the next step, decide what to restart a new life with because
    if this thing comes in with about 170 mph winds, game over. We're in the
    storm surge area and know that everything could be lost. I start thinking
    about the car. What to do. I cover it, lock it up in every way
    imagineable, jack up the front and put it on jack stands in case the water
    just reaches it, but realize I don't have any for the rear. I go to the
    auto parts store and buy some more, but am so frustrated that I don't even
    put them in. I even took the jack handle with me!



    So what do you bring, when all you can carry is what will fit in your 4 door
    car. What is important enough after decades of life. It's hard to make up
    your mind that quick, but I grabbed the insurance papers, bank info.,
    pictures & CD's of the car along with receipts and other detailed info. I
    grab some family pictures, a handful of greeting cards, letters from family
    and friends, my Dad's poncho from Vietnam (and I used it two days later), I
    took my favorite pool cue, shoes and clothes, cameras, a small book on Kauai
    (Hawaii) that my Mom had lent me, a little food and water (not enough
    though) and a few other items. I must have made 50 trips back and forth to
    that car in a hurried attempt to not leave anything critical behind.



    ~ 4:15 pm - I start the next unpleasant task of taking pictures and video of
    every room in my home to document it for insurance purposes, I also capture
    the outside of the house, the trees, fences, flower beds and think that it
    may never look that way again.



    ~ 7:00 pm - I try to grab a few hours sleep and decide that I'll leave
    between midnight and 2:00 am. I hope that if I can just get 3-4 hrs of
    sleep I can make a bit of a long drive. I toss & turn, but just can't
    sleep. At this point, I have no idea what is really to come.



    ~ 9:05 pm - I'm so frustrated and spent that I make the decision to go! I
    must do something that I can control and that is to leave. I grab the last
    few items including a tin can to take care of you can guess what (and boy
    did that come in handy).



    I was also thinking I have all these treasures in my car and what if
    something happens to the car and I lose these most precious items. What if
    my car becomes "ill" and breaks down and is in the the path of the storm.
    The momentos are obviously important, but if I break down who will take them
    and me and will they fit in another vehicle. I'm more concerned about that
    than my own safety.



    LEGEND: Local Time (am/pm), Elapsed Time (T+ xx hrs yy min.), Distance
    Traveled (miles)



    ~ 9:30 pm (T+0) LIftoff - The big driving adventure begins - I leave the
    neighborhood and stop 2 or 3 times to wish the last few stragglers luck.
    Out of 50 houses in my small area there are only about a half dozen
    occupied; that number would soon be about zero and this entire area of
    several hundred thousand people would become practically a ghost town (I've
    seen it before during other evacuations, but it's always eerie). I take one
    last look at the neighborhood, I see a few folks topping off their tanks at
    the local gas station. There is almost no one on the road. I pass by our
    big new church and see the sign that says no Sunday services. All seems
    peaceful and I finally accept that if it's all gone, then it's all gone.
    That started to give me a little relief.



    However, less than 2 minutes later the reality of the world's largest
    traffic jam would soon hit like a brick wall, literally. Remember, in
    emergency situations a caravan does not equal one car (bad idea).



    ~ 9:35 pm (T+5m) - The following takes place on Interstate 45 beginning at
    mile marker 28 / Clear Lake City Blvd. and ending up in the Woodlands about
    50 miles north at mile marker 79 over the course of 3 separate calendar
    days. I enter the freeway at mile marker 28 and know that all I have to do
    is get about 50 miles to mile marker 81 and then I'll be home free to the
    Dallas area. Then the shock sets in. As I enter the freeway I see
    headlights and tail lights as far as the eye can see. I slowly move along
    (about 5 mph; I would have killed for that speed many hours later). I begin
    to see the lights of downtown Houston after about 2 hrs (remember that
    downtown is only 17 miles from where I entered the freeway).



    ~ 11:00 pm (T+1h30m) - I begin to notice a disturbing trend, but
    predictable. Car after car that has overheated or otherwise broken down;
    sometimes a wrecker was present to clear the bottle necks. I'm not talking
    about 1 or 2 cars, but tens or perhaps hundreds. Many made it to the
    shoulder. I remember flipping through the radio dials and hearing the "Art
    Bell" show. If you know him you know that he has very unusual science /
    paranormal types on the show. I can remember his guest talking about time
    travel and all I could think is that I'd like to be time traveled out of
    here.





    Thur. 9/22



    ~ 12:30 am (T+3h, ~10 miles) - After 3 hrs I realize the skyscrapers are no
    closer. After 4 hrs, same thing, then 5 hrs, then a little movement.



    Most of what I remember in the 6 hrs 30 min. to downtown is ambulance, after
    ambulance, after ambulance, after ambulance, after wrecker, after wrecker,
    after wrecker, after police car, after police car (you get the idea) tearing
    down the shoulder. In fact, there was almost a constant drone of sirens
    that entire night, eerie.



    Also, in the night sky one could see and hear police helicopters flying
    along the road probably ecstatic they weren't in our mess. After that would
    come the news helicopters, then military helicopters; this kept up most of
    the night and day for the length of the trip.



    Remember the scene from the end of the movie "Deep Impact". Everyone is
    lined up on the road with broken down cars everywhere and then the space
    rock hits and they drown (from a Tsunami or in our case storm surge!).



    ~ 4:00 am (T+6h30m, 17 miles) - I'm in downtown, yeah! only 6 hr 30 min and
    17 miles later, but I think hey, this is a big evacuation so I'll have to be
    patient; little do I know how patient. To add insult to injury my next door
    neighbor calls and says they opened the high occupancy vehicle lane and they
    zip past me in 20 minutes! Ouch!



    ~ 5:00 am (T+7h30m) - I start to think that at least it's night time and
    cooler, sort of. By this time I have turned off my A/C to conserve gas.
    I'm dreading the heat of the day and realize it will get warmer; much warmer
    than I know.



    ~ 6:00 am (T+8h30m) - Time drags on and a top speed of 1.7 mph (that's 1
    point 7 mph) is reached, I think; yipee.



    ~ 7:00 am (T+9h30m) - More time drags on and now I'm glad that I have that
    "can" along (lol); but how to do that in a practically parked car with
    people all around you in their cars. Hmmm ... Creative uses of umbrellas,
    hanging shirts and windshield shades work quite well. Still, not fun.



    ~ 7:30 am (T+10h) - I call my friend who's a private pilot. I remember him
    saying that he could fly down to Houston and take me and about 200 lbs of
    cargo; sounds great no matter the cost. We then begin to think about the
    mandatory evacuation routes and whether I'll even be allowed to get to the
    airport I want to go to which is behind me at this point, but there would be
    no traffic if I turned around.



    ~ 9:00 am (T+11h30m) - Remember those 2 gas cans I have, in the trunk.
    We'll I get my little procedure down so that about every hour I stop the car
    in the middle of the freeway to hit the trunk release, quickly get out, open
    the vents on each can (and boy do they need it), then jump back in the car.
    All the while I've snarled traffic and stopped them from moving up 2.3
    inches (lol).



    ~ 10:00 am (T+12h30m) - It's getting hot and sweaty and so is every Mom,
    Dad, kid, babies, dogs, horses, goats; you name it and it drove by me in
    every truck, trailer, boat, RV ...



    ~ 10:30 am (T+13h) - I call my pilot friend again and ask him to check out
    other airports along my route where he might be able to get gas for his
    plane. He finds a spot, great! I can cut off time. However, that full
    service spot is in the Woodlands (exit 81) which is the exact spot on I-45
    north where I'll end up about 18 hrs later!



    ~ 11:00 am (T+13h30m) - I notice that my underhood temp is getting a little
    toasty. I sure don't want to break down here; what then? I get creative by
    popping the hood, but not releasing the final latch. I stuff a couple of
    the towels I brought along around the front edges this seems to work (I
    started propping the hood open with a soda can and water bottles, but they
    kept getting flattened by the heavy hood). The under hood temps is dropping
    several degrees. Yeah.



    ~ 12:00 pm (T+14h30m) - I call a friend and ask them to cancel a hotel
    reservation I had made in Houston thinking I would not need it. I later
    regret it as it would have been somewhere I could have gone and gotten to
    quickly had I turned around even though it would have been in the path of
    the hurricane.



    ~ 12:30 pm (T+15h) - Today is forecast to be 100 degrees. It was every bit
    of that on the pavement (maybe 120 degrees and it's still early afternoon;
    where's a little bit of cloud cover or breeze from that darn Hurricane).



    ~ 1:00 pm (T+15h30m) - The under hood temp starts to rise again; this is
    where it starts to get fun. Since the fluid levels looked fine I thought
    there's only one other thing I can do, run the defroster on high heat. Oh
    boy! So I do that, and it's good for a few degrees. I reflect on how much
    fun this is, pavement temp 120 degrees, windows down, defroster on and every
    bit of carbon monoxide and noxious fumes you can think of coming in my
    window; there sure are a lot of cars in need of repair out there. Diesels
    roll by and I have to roll up my windows in the heat with the heater on so
    now it's about 130 degrees in my car. No problem, I reach for a cool bottle
    of water in the ice chest, right. That ice melted long ago on a very warm
    floorboard. I grab a bottle of water that was laying on the floor. The
    outside of the bottle is really warm to the touch; as if you filled it with
    warm tap water. So that's what I drink, which I'm sure isn't helping my
    core body temp. Is it too much fun yet? Just wait, it gets better.



    ~ 1:30 pm - (T+16h) - I pass many more cars that are on the shoulder either
    stalled out, over heated, out of gas, exhausted drivers or any other number
    of reasons. I'm not talking a few cars, I mean tens, hundreds over time and
    later learn more like thousands.



    ~ 2:00 pm (T+16h30m) - The fuel situation is getting a little precarious so
    I start looking for any gas station that might be open just off the freeway.
    The miles 'er hours and 1 mile go by and I spot it, a Texaco station. I see
    people and they are actually pumping gas. I pull to the shoulder and take
    my gas cans out of the trunk and begin to fill my tank (I don't recommend
    the trunk as a storage place, but under the circumstances .). I spot a
    camera and reporter hurriedly running toward me. They zoom the camera in on
    me as I pour gas in my tank. They interview me, ask what I'm doing, find
    out I work for NASA and then quip "Houston, We've Got a Problem" at which
    point I give them a little bit of my thoughts on the subject. I later find
    out these guys are from the Weather Channel and that my relatives around the
    country have seen me and now I have a contract to do TV commercials (just
    kidding, on the contract part of course lol).



    After I fill the tank I walk off the freeway across the access road and to
    the Texaco. There is a line of cars and I don't want to make anyone mad so
    I ask them is it OK if I cut in front of you with loose gas cans, but tell
    them I'll stand between the cars if they want, but they let me pass. I fill
    up, run the cans back to the car and then run back to the station to get
    some water and a few candy bars.



    ~ 2:30 pm (T+17h) - As I'm driving along with "thousands of my friends" I
    happen to look right, there I see someone I know, I can't believe it. He
    sold me several sets of tires from NTB and knows my Shelby well. We talk
    with windows down at the break neck speed of 0.5 - 1.0 mph (if we're lucky).
    I make sure to get his cell phone number (another possible life line); he
    also gives me another bottle of water (every one is precious). He tells me
    that the contra flow lanes are open (all freeway lanes north and south go
    north only to move more cars). We're happy, but see no evidence of it some
    20 miles back (I later wonder why they did not open it earlier in the day
    and 10-20 miles further back in our direction).



    ~ 3:00 pm (T+17h30m) - I pass an amazing array of sweaty, frustrated,
    fearful and uncomfortable people ranging from parents and teenagers to naked
    babies propped up by the car window to try and cool them off. I see many
    dogs panting and foaming as if they are on their last legs. Then there's
    the horse trailers, boats, RV's, 5th wheelers and even a trailer full of
    goats. I must say that these people were very well behaved and supportive
    of each other. There was very little complaining and there were many others
    in much worse shape than I.



    ~ 4:00 pm (T+18h30m) - I spot another gas station; people seem to be doing
    something around the gas pumps. I waste no time. I pull to the shoulder
    and hot foot it to the gas station only to find out that there is no gas.
    However, there is a store and it must have something cold to drink (I'll
    take anything at this point for what is truly becoming a case of heat
    exhaustion with that darn heater running all the time). When I get to the
    door they say "Sorry, we're closed". Ouch. I spot a guy with some cold
    drinks. I go over to him and tell him I'll buy that orange soda for $5
    bucks and even offer him more, I just really need something cold. He gives
    it to me, but doesn't want anything for it; I demand he take something. I
    guzzle that drink like it was the last thing on earth. I return to the car
    fueled up on a cold drink, but with an empty gas can. I have one 5 gallon
    tank left and I'll just have to figure out how to manage the remaining fuel
    because under no circumstances do I want to be stranded on the side of that
    freeway with thousands of others.



    ~ 4:10 pm (T+18h40m) - A disheveled woman approaches me and asks for a ride
    down the road; I was very conflicted about it, but was not comfortable with
    the situation and politely made some excuse.



    ~ 4:30 pm (T+19h) - The underhood temps in my car begin to rise again.
    There's only two options left, stop (not an option) or drive with the hood
    up. Yes, that ought to generate some interest, and it does. I raise the
    hood, lower the seat, scrunch down and begin driving while looking through
    the crack under the hood. I've got at least a whole 3 inches and I get
    pretty good at judging how far the car is in front of me (of course that's
    not real hard at 0 - 1.1 mph). I get lots of strange looks while doing
    this, but it pays off as my underhood temps drop about 10 degrees. I keep
    this up for a few hours until the sun begins to dip and the temps begin to
    drop ever so slightly.



    ~ 5:30 pm (T+20h) - Again I'm feeling really parched and heat exhausted; I
    start asking cars passing by ever so slowly if they have anything cold to
    drink. A lady offers me a half frozen water bottle and asks if she can use
    my cell phone (seems like a great deal to me).



    ~ 6:00 pm (T+20h30m) - As I'm driving along with my hood up someone next to
    me says hey Jeff. I look over and can't believe that I know a second person
    on this crowded road, his name is Rich. This was the key meeting as I would
    eventually find a place to ride out the storm as a result of it. Remember
    those radios my folks lent me ... we'll Rich had some just like it and we
    tuned our radios to the same frequency and we soon had a caravan of 3
    vehicles instead of my lone one (never a good idea to be alone in that type
    of situation).



    ~ 6:30 pm (T+21h) - One, two, three, four, five, six (I lose count); number
    of police cars and motorcycles going tearing down the shoulder with their
    lights on. Of course we all cheered that. We've still seen no results of
    the freeway lanes all going outbound. However, things do start to change in
    a little while.



    ~ 7:00 pm (T+21h30m) - We speed up to about 30 mph (those cops must have
    done something) and it feels like we're flying, but my car is not happy
    about that and is chugging and lurching, uh oh. However, we soon slow back
    down so I don't have to face that problem again for a long time.



    ~ 7:15 pm (T+21h45m) - We see that the mile markers indicate only 10 miles
    to our exit, yeehaw! 10 miles and only 10 hrs to go !!!



    ~ 8:00 pm (T+22h30m) - My car is running very rough and some in our group
    want me to leave it behind. I'm thinking no way, I'll pull over to the
    shoulder, add in the last bit of gas I have and then floor it in hopes that
    it will clean out the problem and it does!



    ~ 11:00 pm (T+24h30m) - I tell you the road and surrounding area just looks
    different at 1 mph. You are in one spot so long that you don't recognize
    it. Especially at night. There were many times where I was not sure where
    I was on a route I had driven time and again.



    ~ 11:30 pm (T+25h) - After 25 hrs of solo driving at the incredible average
    speed of about 1 mph (that really is a demanding type of driving; thank God
    I had an automatic) and being awake for about 65 hrs I truly begin to
    hallucinate. I'm in and out of a dreaming state, but do not want to pull
    over as I don't want to get stuck on the side of the road. So we push on
    ....





    Fri. 9/23



    ~ 12:30 am (T+26h) - Still in and out of a dreaming and awake state; been up
    over 65 hrs straight and driving solo for about 25 hrs (not a good way to
    drive, but decide that I am not going to get stuck on the side of the road
    with the other thousand cars). I did not think I could sleep for 5 or 10
    seconds at a time, but it helps a little in between the tiny movement of all
    the cars. Each time we stop I shift to park and rest on the steering wheel.
    I ask a driver behind me in our caravan to honk or call me on the radio if
    the car in front of me moves to far before I look up.



    ~ 1:00 am (T+26h30m) - I can see the Woodlands (our destination) business
    tower; it's only about a mile away.



    ~ 2:00 am (T+27h30m) - I can see the Woodlands business tower; it's only
    about 3/4 mile away.



    ~ 2:45 am (T+28h15m) - I can STILL see the Woodlands business tower; it's
    only about a 1/4 mile away; this is very irritating, it's not that tall and
    not that far away, but we are creeping along ever so slowly.



    ~ 2:50 am (T+28h20m) - I forgot all about the hurricane and did not even
    care about anything except getting through this traffic jam. I thought the
    risk of drowning in the storm surge was preferable to sitting another minute
    in this; many folks did turn around and head back to the coast.



    ~ 3:15 am (T+28h45m) - Then there was the "hot dog" man; passing out raw hot
    dogs for protein? Not sure why, but he was like the .... 'er uh, hot dog
    fairy as he told us not to take the exit we wanted to, but to go up a little
    further. That move wound up making our lives a lot easier and helped to get
    us to our final destination much more easily and quickly.



    ~ 3:30 am (T+29h, ~50 miles) - We finally make it the 50 miles and pull over
    into a Subway / Walmart parking area and arrive just 2 miles shy of mile
    marker 81, the point where all lanes lead out of the city (both sides of the
    freeway go north). What we see is amazing, hundreds, if not thousands of
    cars pulled all along the shoulders, in parking lots, businesses, closed gas
    stations, supermarkets, everywhere. Folks are either out of gas or
    collapsed from exhaustion and can be seen sleeping in their cars, on their
    cars, in the grassy medians, on the parking lot, with their pets as guards,
    simply everywhere. People are looking for gas, water, food, shelter and
    sleep and almost none of any can be found. The town was completely over
    run.



    I exit the car and am walking around like a drunk after being up near 3
    entire days with 30 hrs non-stop behind the wheel. One of the nice hotels
    parked a car to block their front doors and keep people like us out. There
    was trash all over, the smell of urine (shades of the Superdome), but I can
    see how this happens. Tens of thousands of folks beat us to this town and
    sucked it dry of everything and there was nothing left.



    The local police came around and said the Walmart we were at would not open
    for 3 more days, but gave no indication on where we might go; I'm sure we
    were perceived as a nuisance and messing up the city; it looked like New
    Orleans all over again and the hurricane was still 24 hrs away.



    With no where to stay except inside our cars we begin to make phone calls of
    people in the area to see if we can stay with them. I try one, but no luck.
    Another person in our party has success, yeah! We get directions and depart
    in our 3 car caravan for our refuge.



    - 5:00 am (T+30h30m) - We arrive at a beautiful home in nearby Conroe and
    our treated with terrific hospitality. They provide me with the best glass
    of iced tea and ice that I can remember! Then a little food, a greatly
    needed shower and then total collapse for several hours. What I craved most
    for days was ice and something cold to drink; I now know why there are truly
    so many trucks with ice that are pre-staged before a storm.





    Sat. 9/24



    After the storm we check power at our homes by calling our phone answering
    machines that are plugged into the wall. This is a good trick and we found
    out everyone had power in our group so we decided to hightail it back across
    the city to the south side.



    We begin our trip home in what is still tropical storm force winds. We lose
    our way in the very beginning because we get confused on how to exit the
    housing area. We turn off the cars to save gas. When we're ready to go
    again mine won't start! I flag a guy down who has jumper cables and he
    jumps my car, but the others want to take off without me fearing I'll slow
    them down. My motto, stick together no matter what; I'm not a Boy Scout,
    but I know that's the right thing to do; don't split up. I ask this fellow
    how much for the cables and he takes $20 for them. I wasn't overly happy
    about that, but I needed them in case I had to turn my car off again.



    This time the trip only takes 1 hr (30 times quicker than the previous day).
    We now enter the ghost town of Clear Lake on the south side of Houston. It
    was very unusual to be in such a large metropolitan area with so few people
    and cars and so many places boarded up.





    Reflections



    You might wonder how I could recall all this ... We'll when there's nothing
    to do hour after hour after hour it's easy to get creative; guess that's
    what they say about prison life (hope to never find that out).



    I also reflected on the coverage of Hurricane Katrina and could not figure
    out how all these families got separated and why they did not know where
    their family members were or why they could not reach them. Well little did
    I know that I would be living that situation a few weeks later.



    Looking back, I must say that the overall conduct of the people was much to
    be admired. I did not hear one terse or curse word and most people were
    willing to offer up anything from cold drinks, to food and even water /
    anti-freeze for the radiator. The people's conduct was something to be
    proud of.



    I also thought about all that gasoline that we take for granted, it fuels
    the cars for the escape, wreckers to move the stalled, broken and out of
    fuel cars, the police cars tearing up and down the freeway shoulders,
    ambulances and our essential and prized vehicles. I live near Ellington
    Field where there is a National Guard Air Wing, Coast Guard, etc. After I
    get back I hear the constant drone of C-130 cargo plane engines and
    helicopters coming and going continuously delivering emergency supplies,
    communication and rescue operations all using similar types of fuel.



    All in all, I fared very well with no house damage and just a day of clean
    up. A far cry from the poor Hurricane Katrina victims. Many things went
    right with the evacuation, but many things could have gone better. Katrina
    and the media did a good job of scaring the *@#$! out of everyone in the
    city of Houston (close to half of the about 5 million decided to leave at
    the same time). For one, they could have opened up the contra flow (make
    all lanes outbound) a little sooner and closer in to the city limits. They
    might also have pre-staged fuel trucks at key places along the evacuation
    routes. Surely in their disaster planning this must have come up. An
    unfortunate consequence is that many people will not evacuate next time as
    they think they will surely be caught in a giant traffic jam. Sometimes a
    poorer executed plan is worse than not executing. Of course Hurricane
    Katrina and the press did a good job of scaring the heck out of hundreds of
    thousands of people on the far side of the city that did not need to
    evacuate. When they jumped on the road it kept backing cars up that were in
    the true storm surge area that needed to get out. I spoke to many of them
    that gave up and turned around.



    If you've never had to do it before, a little 9-11 type disaster preparation
    would be a good thing so you don't have to do it under pressure.



    If this was a long read for you and it felt that way, then I hope you were
    able to get a taste of how long the drive really was. I could have headed
    to Los Angeles from Houston, driven through Las Vegas, saw the Pacific
    Ocean, turned around, headed back east, and made it back to Las Vegas again
    in the time in took me to go just 50 miles. If this story was a fast read
    for you, then I hope it was at least a little bit entertaining.



    Thanks for taking the time to read this.



    Jeff



    P.S. These events and this story are the sole ownership of the writer and
    protected, for what reason I have no idea (lol).
     
  3. STAN SIMM

    STAN SIMM Guest

    Re: Diary of a "Rita" Evacuee - "The Rest of the Story"

    Jeff-
    Many thanks for taking the time & effort to put it down in writing. Gives us
    all a chance to pause and reflect on what we would do in a similar
    situation. Makes me glad I live in a "burg" of only 250K people and 5 hrs.
    from the coast.
    BTW, I consider my Shelbys as "16 gal. emergency gasoline storage
    containers". Treated with STABIL, the gas will remain good for well over a
    year. Since I track my '95 Cobra R quite a bit, I have 6 ea. 5 gal. gas
    jugs always at my disposal. I use a slightly modified kerosene pump to
    transfer the gas from the tank into the jugs.
    Regards, Stan
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Jeff Fox" <jfoxnasa@worldnet.att.net>
    To: <ShelbyMustang@CarMemories.com>
    Sent: Tuesday, October 04, 2005 10:30 PM
    Subject: Diary of a "Rita" Evacuee - "The Rest of the Story"


    >
    > This is off topic, but it definitely has to do with motor vehicles !!! If
    > you'd like to get some insight into the evacuation, the please see below

    ....
    >
    > ------------------------------------------------------
    >
    > This is long, but maybe an interesting read for you. If you want an

    inkling
    > of what the largest evacuation in U.S. history was like, then read on ...
    >
    >
    >
    > What follows is a diary of a tiny slice of the plight of the "Evacuees
    > Running from Hurricane Rita". I wanted to take a look at the preparation
    > and evacuation angle as most eyes are usually focused on the storm and
    > tragic aftermath.
    >
    >
    >
    > People and Vehicle Report
    >
    >
    >
    > 1 mile = 5,280 ft
    >
    > 1 avg. vehicle + space between another vehicle = ~ 25'
    >
    > Assume about 2 people per car, but usually more
    >
    > Assume 3 lanes of traffic one way, but many times up to 4 and 5 and
    > sometimes fewer
    >
    >
    >
    > Continuing ...
    >
    >
    >
    > 5280 ft / 25 ft = ~ 211 vehicles per mile x 2 people = 422 people per mile

    x
    > 3 lanes = 633 vehicles and 1266 people per mile
    >
    >
    >
    > Now .... consider that there were approximately 4 or 5 evacuation routes
    > (say 4.5), then you have 2848 vehicles and 5697 people
    >
    >
    >
    > What does this mean? An unwanted Guiness Book of World Records Award that

    I
    > never wanted to be in.
    >
    >
    >
    > The clincher .... consider many if not all of these evacuation routes were
    > backed up for about 100 miles !!!!!!! and all at the same time!
    >
    >
    >
    > Finishing with the math ...
    >
    >
    >
    > 2848 vehicles X 100 miles = 284,800 vehicles !!! (and I didn't see one
    > Shelby lol, that was the only humor there was)
    >
    > 5697 people x 100 miles = 569,700 people !!! (probably closer to 700,000)
    >
    >
    >
    > Above are just my crude estimates of the amount of people and vehicles

    that
    > moved through Houston at any given moment during my 30 hr escape! Many,
    > many more passed the same way in the hours preceding and after me.
    >
    >
    >
    > The estimates over the day and a half exodus are about 2 million and I
    > believe that's about right (it sure felt like it).
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Time & Mileage Report
    >
    >
    >
    > I left my house at about 9:30 pm on Wed. evening. Downtown Houston is 17
    > miles from my house; about a 25 min. trip on an average day. So I think

    it
    > will be slower than that, but nothing like I would ever have imagined. 6
    > hrs 30 min. later I make it to downtown Houston ! (just 17 miles).

    Whewww
    > ... That's got to be the worst of it, so I think. I keep on. All I need

    to
    > do is get to Mile marker 81 on the I-45 freeway; just 33 more miles (I can
    > do it). I'll cut to the chase and you can read the whole story below, a
    > mere 30 hrs after I leave my home I see my exit! 30 hrs and just 50 miles
    > traveled. It was absolutely an incredible mostly unreported story. If

    you
    > watched the Weather Channel you may have seen me interviewed on the side

    of
    > the freeway putting gas in my car with one of my two "full" gas cans that

    I
    > was lucky enough to bring along.
    >
    >
    >
    > I used about 23 gallons of gas over the course of 50 miles; for about a
    > whopping 2 miles per gallon.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Meet me on the Freeway, 'er I mean the Parking Lot (Below is a more
    > detailed diary of the exodus) ...
    >
    >
    >
    > Tues. 9/20
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 2:00 pm - While at work we begin thinking it might be a good idea to
    > cancel our Wed. meeting and while were at it maybe Thurs. and Fri. too;
    > good, no meetings, don't like them that much anyway.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 4:45 pm - I leave work and decide to top off my gas tank (My daily

    driver
    > is a 1992 Cadillac Sedan DeVille that does not get very good mileage). I
    > then think, hey, I should stop by and get a haircut in case they're out of
    > comission for a while.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 5:30 pm - I make the most important decision; I grab my 2.5 gallon
    > lawnmower gas can and a 5 gallon gas can that I used to fill the Shelby

    when
    > I was having some carburetor problems many months back. I always wanted

    to
    > get rid of that can because it was in the way, but what a life saver.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 6:15 pm - My parents live close by and ask me to help board the windows,
    > hmmm, they're getting serious. I leave for home, but before I do I ask

    them
    > if I can have their small walkie talkies I bought them a few years ago
    > (unknown to me it would be an important decision).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 7:00 pm - I decide that maybe I should board up too; I'll get up early

    the
    > next morning
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Wed. 9/21
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 8:05 am - Dad arrives to help me board up my house; I continue bringing

    in
    > things that might blow around (like patio furniture!)
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 10:00 am - All my neighbors in my cul-de-sac are out. They are making a
    > list of everyone's cell and home phone numbers.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 11:15 am - Mom and Dad drive by my house on the way out of town; Mom is
    > worried I might want to stay because of my Shelby; I'm worried that it

    will
    > either be flooded, stolen or looted
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 11:16 am - I run through a mix of emotions from feeling angry and

    sickened
    > to rattled nerves. I finally start moving furniture in the house. I wrap

    a
    > few things in plastic, move some furniture in front of the door in a

    futile
    > attempt to keep the wind from opening it. As I keep this up I'm getting
    > more irritated and realize that I probably should get out.
    >
    >
    >
    > I then take the next step, decide what to restart a new life with because
    > if this thing comes in with about 170 mph winds, game over. We're in the
    > storm surge area and know that everything could be lost. I start thinking
    > about the car. What to do. I cover it, lock it up in every way
    > imagineable, jack up the front and put it on jack stands in case the water
    > just reaches it, but realize I don't have any for the rear. I go to the
    > auto parts store and buy some more, but am so frustrated that I don't even
    > put them in. I even took the jack handle with me!
    >
    >
    >
    > So what do you bring, when all you can carry is what will fit in your 4

    door
    > car. What is important enough after decades of life. It's hard to make

    up
    > your mind that quick, but I grabbed the insurance papers, bank info.,
    > pictures & CD's of the car along with receipts and other detailed info. I
    > grab some family pictures, a handful of greeting cards, letters from

    family
    > and friends, my Dad's poncho from Vietnam (and I used it two days later),

    I
    > took my favorite pool cue, shoes and clothes, cameras, a small book on

    Kauai
    > (Hawaii) that my Mom had lent me, a little food and water (not enough
    > though) and a few other items. I must have made 50 trips back and forth

    to
    > that car in a hurried attempt to not leave anything critical behind.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 4:15 pm - I start the next unpleasant task of taking pictures and video

    of
    > every room in my home to document it for insurance purposes, I also

    capture
    > the outside of the house, the trees, fences, flower beds and think that it
    > may never look that way again.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 7:00 pm - I try to grab a few hours sleep and decide that I'll leave
    > between midnight and 2:00 am. I hope that if I can just get 3-4 hrs of
    > sleep I can make a bit of a long drive. I toss & turn, but just can't
    > sleep. At this point, I have no idea what is really to come.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 9:05 pm - I'm so frustrated and spent that I make the decision to go! I
    > must do something that I can control and that is to leave. I grab the

    last
    > few items including a tin can to take care of you can guess what (and boy
    > did that come in handy).
    >
    >
    >
    > I was also thinking I have all these treasures in my car and what if
    > something happens to the car and I lose these most precious items. What

    if
    > my car becomes "ill" and breaks down and is in the the path of the storm.
    > The momentos are obviously important, but if I break down who will take

    them
    > and me and will they fit in another vehicle. I'm more concerned about

    that
    > than my own safety.
    >
    >
    >
    > LEGEND: Local Time (am/pm), Elapsed Time (T+ xx hrs yy min.), Distance
    > Traveled (miles)
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 9:30 pm (T+0) LIftoff - The big driving adventure begins - I leave the
    > neighborhood and stop 2 or 3 times to wish the last few stragglers luck.
    > Out of 50 houses in my small area there are only about a half dozen
    > occupied; that number would soon be about zero and this entire area of
    > several hundred thousand people would become practically a ghost town

    (I've
    > seen it before during other evacuations, but it's always eerie). I take

    one
    > last look at the neighborhood, I see a few folks topping off their tanks

    at
    > the local gas station. There is almost no one on the road. I pass by our
    > big new church and see the sign that says no Sunday services. All seems
    > peaceful and I finally accept that if it's all gone, then it's all gone.
    > That started to give me a little relief.
    >
    >
    >
    > However, less than 2 minutes later the reality of the world's largest
    > traffic jam would soon hit like a brick wall, literally. Remember, in
    > emergency situations a caravan does not equal one car (bad idea).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 9:35 pm (T+5m) - The following takes place on Interstate 45 beginning at
    > mile marker 28 / Clear Lake City Blvd. and ending up in the Woodlands

    about
    > 50 miles north at mile marker 79 over the course of 3 separate calendar
    > days. I enter the freeway at mile marker 28 and know that all I have to

    do
    > is get about 50 miles to mile marker 81 and then I'll be home free to the
    > Dallas area. Then the shock sets in. As I enter the freeway I see
    > headlights and tail lights as far as the eye can see. I slowly move along
    > (about 5 mph; I would have killed for that speed many hours later). I

    begin
    > to see the lights of downtown Houston after about 2 hrs (remember that
    > downtown is only 17 miles from where I entered the freeway).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 11:00 pm (T+1h30m) - I begin to notice a disturbing trend, but
    > predictable. Car after car that has overheated or otherwise broken down;
    > sometimes a wrecker was present to clear the bottle necks. I'm not

    talking
    > about 1 or 2 cars, but tens or perhaps hundreds. Many made it to the
    > shoulder. I remember flipping through the radio dials and hearing the

    "Art
    > Bell" show. If you know him you know that he has very unusual science /
    > paranormal types on the show. I can remember his guest talking about time
    > travel and all I could think is that I'd like to be time traveled out of
    > here.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Thur. 9/22
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 12:30 am (T+3h, ~10 miles) - After 3 hrs I realize the skyscrapers are

    no
    > closer. After 4 hrs, same thing, then 5 hrs, then a little movement.
    >
    >
    >
    > Most of what I remember in the 6 hrs 30 min. to downtown is ambulance,

    after
    > ambulance, after ambulance, after ambulance, after wrecker, after wrecker,
    > after wrecker, after police car, after police car (you get the idea)

    tearing
    > down the shoulder. In fact, there was almost a constant drone of sirens
    > that entire night, eerie.
    >
    >
    >
    > Also, in the night sky one could see and hear police helicopters flying
    > along the road probably ecstatic they weren't in our mess. After that

    would
    > come the news helicopters, then military helicopters; this kept up most of
    > the night and day for the length of the trip.
    >
    >
    >
    > Remember the scene from the end of the movie "Deep Impact". Everyone is
    > lined up on the road with broken down cars everywhere and then the space
    > rock hits and they drown (from a Tsunami or in our case storm surge!).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 4:00 am (T+6h30m, 17 miles) - I'm in downtown, yeah! only 6 hr 30 min

    and
    > 17 miles later, but I think hey, this is a big evacuation so I'll have to

    be
    > patient; little do I know how patient. To add insult to injury my next

    door
    > neighbor calls and says they opened the high occupancy vehicle lane and

    they
    > zip past me in 20 minutes! Ouch!
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 5:00 am (T+7h30m) - I start to think that at least it's night time and
    > cooler, sort of. By this time I have turned off my A/C to conserve gas.
    > I'm dreading the heat of the day and realize it will get warmer; much

    warmer
    > than I know.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 6:00 am (T+8h30m) - Time drags on and a top speed of 1.7 mph (that's 1
    > point 7 mph) is reached, I think; yipee.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 7:00 am (T+9h30m) - More time drags on and now I'm glad that I have that
    > "can" along (lol); but how to do that in a practically parked car with
    > people all around you in their cars. Hmmm ... Creative uses of

    umbrellas,
    > hanging shirts and windshield shades work quite well. Still, not fun.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 7:30 am (T+10h) - I call my friend who's a private pilot. I remember

    him
    > saying that he could fly down to Houston and take me and about 200 lbs of
    > cargo; sounds great no matter the cost. We then begin to think about the
    > mandatory evacuation routes and whether I'll even be allowed to get to the
    > airport I want to go to which is behind me at this point, but there would

    be
    > no traffic if I turned around.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 9:00 am (T+11h30m) - Remember those 2 gas cans I have, in the trunk.
    > We'll I get my little procedure down so that about every hour I stop the

    car
    > in the middle of the freeway to hit the trunk release, quickly get out,

    open
    > the vents on each can (and boy do they need it), then jump back in the

    car.
    > All the while I've snarled traffic and stopped them from moving up 2.3
    > inches (lol).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 10:00 am (T+12h30m) - It's getting hot and sweaty and so is every Mom,
    > Dad, kid, babies, dogs, horses, goats; you name it and it drove by me in
    > every truck, trailer, boat, RV ...
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 10:30 am (T+13h) - I call my pilot friend again and ask him to check out
    > other airports along my route where he might be able to get gas for his
    > plane. He finds a spot, great! I can cut off time. However, that full
    > service spot is in the Woodlands (exit 81) which is the exact spot on I-45
    > north where I'll end up about 18 hrs later!
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 11:00 am (T+13h30m) - I notice that my underhood temp is getting a

    little
    > toasty. I sure don't want to break down here; what then? I get creative

    by
    > popping the hood, but not releasing the final latch. I stuff a couple of
    > the towels I brought along around the front edges this seems to work (I
    > started propping the hood open with a soda can and water bottles, but they
    > kept getting flattened by the heavy hood). The under hood temps is

    dropping
    > several degrees. Yeah.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 12:00 pm (T+14h30m) - I call a friend and ask them to cancel a hotel
    > reservation I had made in Houston thinking I would not need it. I later
    > regret it as it would have been somewhere I could have gone and gotten to
    > quickly had I turned around even though it would have been in the path of
    > the hurricane.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 12:30 pm (T+15h) - Today is forecast to be 100 degrees. It was every

    bit
    > of that on the pavement (maybe 120 degrees and it's still early afternoon;
    > where's a little bit of cloud cover or breeze from that darn Hurricane).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 1:00 pm (T+15h30m) - The under hood temp starts to rise again; this is
    > where it starts to get fun. Since the fluid levels looked fine I thought
    > there's only one other thing I can do, run the defroster on high heat. Oh
    > boy! So I do that, and it's good for a few degrees. I reflect on how

    much
    > fun this is, pavement temp 120 degrees, windows down, defroster on and

    every
    > bit of carbon monoxide and noxious fumes you can think of coming in my
    > window; there sure are a lot of cars in need of repair out there. Diesels
    > roll by and I have to roll up my windows in the heat with the heater on so
    > now it's about 130 degrees in my car. No problem, I reach for a cool

    bottle
    > of water in the ice chest, right. That ice melted long ago on a very warm
    > floorboard. I grab a bottle of water that was laying on the floor. The
    > outside of the bottle is really warm to the touch; as if you filled it

    with
    > warm tap water. So that's what I drink, which I'm sure isn't helping my
    > core body temp. Is it too much fun yet? Just wait, it gets better.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 1:30 pm - (T+16h) - I pass many more cars that are on the shoulder

    either
    > stalled out, over heated, out of gas, exhausted drivers or any other

    number
    > of reasons. I'm not talking a few cars, I mean tens, hundreds over time

    and
    > later learn more like thousands.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 2:00 pm (T+16h30m) - The fuel situation is getting a little precarious

    so
    > I start looking for any gas station that might be open just off the

    freeway.
    > The miles 'er hours and 1 mile go by and I spot it, a Texaco station. I

    see
    > people and they are actually pumping gas. I pull to the shoulder and take
    > my gas cans out of the trunk and begin to fill my tank (I don't recommend
    > the trunk as a storage place, but under the circumstances .). I spot a
    > camera and reporter hurriedly running toward me. They zoom the camera in

    on
    > me as I pour gas in my tank. They interview me, ask what I'm doing, find
    > out I work for NASA and then quip "Houston, We've Got a Problem" at which
    > point I give them a little bit of my thoughts on the subject. I later

    find
    > out these guys are from the Weather Channel and that my relatives around

    the
    > country have seen me and now I have a contract to do TV commercials (just
    > kidding, on the contract part of course lol).
    >
    >
    >
    > After I fill the tank I walk off the freeway across the access road and to
    > the Texaco. There is a line of cars and I don't want to make anyone mad

    so
    > I ask them is it OK if I cut in front of you with loose gas cans, but tell
    > them I'll stand between the cars if they want, but they let me pass. I

    fill
    > up, run the cans back to the car and then run back to the station to get
    > some water and a few candy bars.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 2:30 pm (T+17h) - As I'm driving along with "thousands of my friends" I
    > happen to look right, there I see someone I know, I can't believe it. He
    > sold me several sets of tires from NTB and knows my Shelby well. We talk
    > with windows down at the break neck speed of 0.5 - 1.0 mph (if we're

    lucky).
    > I make sure to get his cell phone number (another possible life line); he
    > also gives me another bottle of water (every one is precious). He tells

    me
    > that the contra flow lanes are open (all freeway lanes north and south go
    > north only to move more cars). We're happy, but see no evidence of it

    some
    > 20 miles back (I later wonder why they did not open it earlier in the day
    > and 10-20 miles further back in our direction).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 3:00 pm (T+17h30m) - I pass an amazing array of sweaty, frustrated,
    > fearful and uncomfortable people ranging from parents and teenagers to

    naked
    > babies propped up by the car window to try and cool them off. I see many
    > dogs panting and foaming as if they are on their last legs. Then there's
    > the horse trailers, boats, RV's, 5th wheelers and even a trailer full of
    > goats. I must say that these people were very well behaved and supportive
    > of each other. There was very little complaining and there were many

    others
    > in much worse shape than I.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 4:00 pm (T+18h30m) - I spot another gas station; people seem to be doing
    > something around the gas pumps. I waste no time. I pull to the shoulder
    > and hot foot it to the gas station only to find out that there is no gas.
    > However, there is a store and it must have something cold to drink (I'll
    > take anything at this point for what is truly becoming a case of heat
    > exhaustion with that darn heater running all the time). When I get to the
    > door they say "Sorry, we're closed". Ouch. I spot a guy with some cold
    > drinks. I go over to him and tell him I'll buy that orange soda for $5
    > bucks and even offer him more, I just really need something cold. He

    gives
    > it to me, but doesn't want anything for it; I demand he take something. I
    > guzzle that drink like it was the last thing on earth. I return to the

    car
    > fueled up on a cold drink, but with an empty gas can. I have one 5 gallon
    > tank left and I'll just have to figure out how to manage the remaining

    fuel
    > because under no circumstances do I want to be stranded on the side of

    that
    > freeway with thousands of others.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 4:10 pm (T+18h40m) - A disheveled woman approaches me and asks for a

    ride
    > down the road; I was very conflicted about it, but was not comfortable

    with
    > the situation and politely made some excuse.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 4:30 pm (T+19h) - The underhood temps in my car begin to rise again.
    > There's only two options left, stop (not an option) or drive with the hood
    > up. Yes, that ought to generate some interest, and it does. I raise the
    > hood, lower the seat, scrunch down and begin driving while looking through
    > the crack under the hood. I've got at least a whole 3 inches and I get
    > pretty good at judging how far the car is in front of me (of course that's
    > not real hard at 0 - 1.1 mph). I get lots of strange looks while doing
    > this, but it pays off as my underhood temps drop about 10 degrees. I keep
    > this up for a few hours until the sun begins to dip and the temps begin to
    > drop ever so slightly.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 5:30 pm (T+20h) - Again I'm feeling really parched and heat exhausted; I
    > start asking cars passing by ever so slowly if they have anything cold to
    > drink. A lady offers me a half frozen water bottle and asks if she can

    use
    > my cell phone (seems like a great deal to me).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 6:00 pm (T+20h30m) - As I'm driving along with my hood up someone next

    to
    > me says hey Jeff. I look over and can't believe that I know a second

    person
    > on this crowded road, his name is Rich. This was the key meeting as I

    would
    > eventually find a place to ride out the storm as a result of it. Remember
    > those radios my folks lent me ... we'll Rich had some just like it and we
    > tuned our radios to the same frequency and we soon had a caravan of 3
    > vehicles instead of my lone one (never a good idea to be alone in that

    type
    > of situation).
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 6:30 pm (T+21h) - One, two, three, four, five, six (I lose count);

    number
    > of police cars and motorcycles going tearing down the shoulder with their
    > lights on. Of course we all cheered that. We've still seen no results of
    > the freeway lanes all going outbound. However, things do start to change

    in
    > a little while.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 7:00 pm (T+21h30m) - We speed up to about 30 mph (those cops must have
    > done something) and it feels like we're flying, but my car is not happy
    > about that and is chugging and lurching, uh oh. However, we soon slow

    back
    > down so I don't have to face that problem again for a long time.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 7:15 pm (T+21h45m) - We see that the mile markers indicate only 10 miles
    > to our exit, yeehaw! 10 miles and only 10 hrs to go !!!
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 8:00 pm (T+22h30m) - My car is running very rough and some in our group
    > want me to leave it behind. I'm thinking no way, I'll pull over to the
    > shoulder, add in the last bit of gas I have and then floor it in hopes

    that
    > it will clean out the problem and it does!
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 11:00 pm (T+24h30m) - I tell you the road and surrounding area just

    looks
    > different at 1 mph. You are in one spot so long that you don't recognize
    > it. Especially at night. There were many times where I was not sure

    where
    > I was on a route I had driven time and again.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 11:30 pm (T+25h) - After 25 hrs of solo driving at the incredible

    average
    > speed of about 1 mph (that really is a demanding type of driving; thank

    God
    > I had an automatic) and being awake for about 65 hrs I truly begin to
    > hallucinate. I'm in and out of a dreaming state, but do not want to pull
    > over as I don't want to get stuck on the side of the road. So we push on
    > ...
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Fri. 9/23
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 12:30 am (T+26h) - Still in and out of a dreaming and awake state; been

    up
    > over 65 hrs straight and driving solo for about 25 hrs (not a good way to
    > drive, but decide that I am not going to get stuck on the side of the road
    > with the other thousand cars). I did not think I could sleep for 5 or 10
    > seconds at a time, but it helps a little in between the tiny movement of

    all
    > the cars. Each time we stop I shift to park and rest on the steering

    wheel.
    > I ask a driver behind me in our caravan to honk or call me on the radio if
    > the car in front of me moves to far before I look up.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 1:00 am (T+26h30m) - I can see the Woodlands (our destination) business
    > tower; it's only about a mile away.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 2:00 am (T+27h30m) - I can see the Woodlands business tower; it's only
    > about 3/4 mile away.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 2:45 am (T+28h15m) - I can STILL see the Woodlands business tower; it's
    > only about a 1/4 mile away; this is very irritating, it's not that tall

    and
    > not that far away, but we are creeping along ever so slowly.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 2:50 am (T+28h20m) - I forgot all about the hurricane and did not even
    > care about anything except getting through this traffic jam. I thought

    the
    > risk of drowning in the storm surge was preferable to sitting another

    minute
    > in this; many folks did turn around and head back to the coast.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 3:15 am (T+28h45m) - Then there was the "hot dog" man; passing out raw

    hot
    > dogs for protein? Not sure why, but he was like the .... 'er uh, hot dog
    > fairy as he told us not to take the exit we wanted to, but to go up a

    little
    > further. That move wound up making our lives a lot easier and helped to

    get
    > us to our final destination much more easily and quickly.
    >
    >
    >
    > ~ 3:30 am (T+29h, ~50 miles) - We finally make it the 50 miles and pull

    over
    > into a Subway / Walmart parking area and arrive just 2 miles shy of mile
    > marker 81, the point where all lanes lead out of the city (both sides of

    the
    > freeway go north). What we see is amazing, hundreds, if not thousands of
    > cars pulled all along the shoulders, in parking lots, businesses, closed

    gas
    > stations, supermarkets, everywhere. Folks are either out of gas or
    > collapsed from exhaustion and can be seen sleeping in their cars, on their
    > cars, in the grassy medians, on the parking lot, with their pets as

    guards,
    > simply everywhere. People are looking for gas, water, food, shelter and
    > sleep and almost none of any can be found. The town was completely over
    > run.
    >
    >
    >
    > I exit the car and am walking around like a drunk after being up near 3
    > entire days with 30 hrs non-stop behind the wheel. One of the nice hotels
    > parked a car to block their front doors and keep people like us out.

    There
    > was trash all over, the smell of urine (shades of the Superdome), but I

    can
    > see how this happens. Tens of thousands of folks beat us to this town and
    > sucked it dry of everything and there was nothing left.
    >
    >
    >
    > The local police came around and said the Walmart we were at would not

    open
    > for 3 more days, but gave no indication on where we might go; I'm sure we
    > were perceived as a nuisance and messing up the city; it looked like New
    > Orleans all over again and the hurricane was still 24 hrs away.
    >
    >
    >
    > With no where to stay except inside our cars we begin to make phone calls

    of
    > people in the area to see if we can stay with them. I try one, but no

    luck.
    > Another person in our party has success, yeah! We get directions and

    depart
    > in our 3 car caravan for our refuge.
    >
    >
    >
    > - 5:00 am (T+30h30m) - We arrive at a beautiful home in nearby Conroe and
    > our treated with terrific hospitality. They provide me with the best

    glass
    > of iced tea and ice that I can remember! Then a little food, a greatly
    > needed shower and then total collapse for several hours. What I craved

    most
    > for days was ice and something cold to drink; I now know why there are

    truly
    > so many trucks with ice that are pre-staged before a storm.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Sat. 9/24
    >
    >
    >
    > After the storm we check power at our homes by calling our phone answering
    > machines that are plugged into the wall. This is a good trick and we

    found
    > out everyone had power in our group so we decided to hightail it back

    across
    > the city to the south side.
    >
    >
    >
    > We begin our trip home in what is still tropical storm force winds. We

    lose
    > our way in the very beginning because we get confused on how to exit the
    > housing area. We turn off the cars to save gas. When we're ready to go
    > again mine won't start! I flag a guy down who has jumper cables and he
    > jumps my car, but the others want to take off without me fearing I'll slow
    > them down. My motto, stick together no matter what; I'm not a Boy Scout,
    > but I know that's the right thing to do; don't split up. I ask this

    fellow
    > how much for the cables and he takes $20 for them. I wasn't overly happy
    > about that, but I needed them in case I had to turn my car off again.
    >
    >
    >
    > This time the trip only takes 1 hr (30 times quicker than the previous

    day).
    > We now enter the ghost town of Clear Lake on the south side of Houston.

    It
    > was very unusual to be in such a large metropolitan area with so few

    people
    > and cars and so many places boarded up.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Reflections
    >
    >
    >
    > You might wonder how I could recall all this ... We'll when there's

    nothing
    > to do hour after hour after hour it's easy to get creative; guess that's
    > what they say about prison life (hope to never find that out).
    >
    >
    >
    > I also reflected on the coverage of Hurricane Katrina and could not figure
    > out how all these families got separated and why they did not know where
    > their family members were or why they could not reach them. Well little

    did
    > I know that I would be living that situation a few weeks later.
    >
    >
    >
    > Looking back, I must say that the overall conduct of the people was much

    to
    > be admired. I did not hear one terse or curse word and most people were
    > willing to offer up anything from cold drinks, to food and even water /
    > anti-freeze for the radiator. The people's conduct was something to be
    > proud of.
    >
    >
    >
    > I also thought about all that gasoline that we take for granted, it fuels
    > the cars for the escape, wreckers to move the stalled, broken and out of
    > fuel cars, the police cars tearing up and down the freeway shoulders,
    > ambulances and our essential and prized vehicles. I live near Ellington
    > Field where there is a National Guard Air Wing, Coast Guard, etc. After I
    > get back I hear the constant drone of C-130 cargo plane engines and
    > helicopters coming and going continuously delivering emergency supplies,
    > communication and rescue operations all using similar types of fuel.
    >
    >
    >
    > All in all, I fared very well with no house damage and just a day of clean
    > up. A far cry from the poor Hurricane Katrina victims. Many things went
    > right with the evacuation, but many things could have gone better.

    Katrina
    > and the media did a good job of scaring the *@#$! out of everyone in the
    > city of Houston (close to half of the about 5 million decided to leave at
    > the same time). For one, they could have opened up the contra flow (make
    > all lanes outbound) a little sooner and closer in to the city limits.

    They
    > might also have pre-staged fuel trucks at key places along the evacuation
    > routes. Surely in their disaster planning this must have come up. An
    > unfortunate consequence is that many people will not evacuate next time as
    > they think they will surely be caught in a giant traffic jam. Sometimes a
    > poorer executed plan is worse than not executing. Of course Hurricane
    > Katrina and the press did a good job of scaring the heck out of hundreds

    of
    > thousands of people on the far side of the city that did not need to
    > evacuate. When they jumped on the road it kept backing cars up that were

    in
    > the true storm surge area that needed to get out. I spoke to many of them
    > that gave up and turned around.
    >
    >
    >
    > If you've never had to do it before, a little 9-11 type disaster

    preparation
    > would be a good thing so you don't have to do it under pressure.
    >
    >
    >
    > If this was a long read for you and it felt that way, then I hope you were
    > able to get a taste of how long the drive really was. I could have headed
    > to Los Angeles from Houston, driven through Las Vegas, saw the Pacific
    > Ocean, turned around, headed back east, and made it back to Las Vegas

    again
    > in the time in took me to go just 50 miles. If this story was a fast read
    > for you, then I hope it was at least a little bit entertaining.
    >
    >
    >
    > Thanks for taking the time to read this.
    >
    >
    >
    > Jeff
    >
    >
    >
    > P.S. These events and this story are the sole ownership of the writer and
    > protected, for what reason I have no idea (lol).
    >
    >
    >
     

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