This is the last report of on planned KLR Evac from New Orleans. On
Sunday night I decided to ride out the storm here in New Orleans.
Why? The news reports were that the storm would not be so bad for
New Orleans, and there was no danger of the levees being overrun by
the tidal surge. So, it was almost safe so stay. Why not simply
run? I'll tell you why at the end of this post.
On Sunday night, I stayed up to 2 AM watching movies. The storm was
slated to hit at about noon on Monday. I got up Monday at about 9:30
AM and had no power, no AC, no TV. Crap.
I sat on my covered porch until about noon, the height of the storm.
All that I got in the Mid City area of N.O. was wind, no real rain.
The wind could not have been more than about 80 MPH. I got bored and
took a nap. I got up again at about 4 PM. No major damage, a light
pole on the corner fell down, and a tree in the next block toppled
over.
On Tuesday, the day was overcast with rain, still no power. I sat
around and read National Geo, and the newspaper from a few days
ago. We got lucky in that for the last two days we have been
overcast. No AC and in the tropical summer sun is a drag. They are
telling us that it might be up to 9 days with no power! Gulp!
Today, Wednesday, at about noon it seems that people began to come
out and the city is starting to come back to life. A few bars are
open, and I had lunch at the Port O' Call, the best burgers in NO. I
found a coffee shop with internet to get this message out.
I was a prisoner in New Orleans, I could not leave the city, and can
only move around before 6 PM, then curfew starts. Just a few hours
ago it was announced that citizens would be allowed to re-enter N.O.
So by Thursday, we will all be sweating in our homes, counting the
hours until power returns.
It was surreal being able to ride around on the KLR and I did not see
another soul. I did not see or talk to anyone for almost 2 days!
Mostly, I sat around and watched the rain, read and napped.
Yesterday I was armed with a 9mm Glock. Today, I am armed with a
Plunger. The TV says that the sewer system is backed up and we are
not to shower or flush, for fear of the toilets backing up. Like I
said, I am armed with a Plunger.
Some stores are opening so I will not starve to death. Just in time,
I had 1-2 days of food left - and was out of Martel and cigars.
Now, should you ask, why not simply evacuate and not run the risk? I
may be a prisoner in the city, if I left the city the cops wouldn't
let me back in. The cops were not letting anyone back in to NO
until a little while ago. Those who evacuated are in hotels or
cramped into shelters, some are sleeping in cars on the side of the
road. So I figured that I would stay here and rough it out. Money
was not really an issue, I could afford to leave, but I will only
leave if staying is simply too dangerous, and this storm was not too
overly unsafe for N.O. If I had left, I would find myself in a hotel
in God knows where for a few days, or in a shelter. Given the
choices, I'd rather tough it out here, AC or not. Plus the city's
population will return AC or not.
Lastly, my plans were not perfect, but would have worked. My intent
was to watch the weather to the last second, then run on my KLR if I
had to. The only glitches are that I needed more candles for
nighttime. A little more food would be OK, and one of those
flashlights that is built into a headband, beats having to hold the
flashlight with one hand all the time. OH, and silly me, I forgot
to get an AM FM radio! So I had nothing to listen to for updates. I
was able to call out on my cell for updates.
The crisis is over for now. All that I lack is some AC and TV, up to
9 long freaken days away. Thankfully, the storm did not make a major
impact on N.O. I hope that I never have to deploy my KLR Evac Plans,
but at least I had a plan.
Eddie (03' KLR "la poderosa")
nklr good news from mexico; bad news from san diego
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nklr good news from mexico; bad news from san diego
Russia and Germany invaded Poland so many times that
Poland definitely has a sovereign right to have whatever
missiles it wants on its soil.
OK Shallow Hal?
Jeffrey
speaking of provoking a war
do yall think that Russia setting up defensive missiles near our
borders would
be considered provocative behavior.
I wonder what our reaction would be?
I believe that we can predict what their reaction will be as we sent
missile
to Poland.
for defense only of course
we and the world can always trust our government
hal2006
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klr evac from new orleans - epilogue - nklr
Good to hear that you are all right. I wondered how you were doing.
Sucks to be out of power but at least some things are coming back. Al
A13 Iowa
eddiebmauri wrote:
> The crisis is over for now. All that I lack is some AC and TV, up to > 9 long freaken days away. Thankfully, the storm did not make a major > impact on N.O. I hope that I never have to deploy my KLR Evac Plans, > but at least I had a plan. > > Eddie (03' KLR "la poderosa") > > >
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klr evac from new orleans - epilogue - nklr
While we don't have hurricanes in Northeast Texas, we do have ice storms. Our rural power companies do not ever plan ahead by trimming trees, so we lose power when the temp is in the 10's or 20's. I got tired of it once when I had all 5 of my grandchildren at the house and went to Home Depot and bought a Honda generator. I got home, de-boxed it, fueled it, put in oil, hooked it up to some aux. heaters and lamps and started it up, and of course the power came back on right at that minute.
However, I will say that it has come in very handy at times since then. It did not cost as much as I thought it would. So, if you live in an area where you lose power, it's a good idea to have one, in my opinion.
Glad you came out OK on the hurricane, by the way. Good luck.
db
----- Original Message ----
From: Horton Oliphant
To: klr DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 4, 2008 9:10:25 AM
Subject: Re: [DSN_KLR650] KLR Evac from New Orleans - Epilogue - NKLR
Good to hear that you are all right. I wondered how you were doing.
Sucks to be out of power but at least some things are coming back. Al
A13 Iowa
eddiebmauri wrote:
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]> The crisis is over for now. All that I lack is some AC and TV, up to > 9 long freaken days away. Thankfully, the storm did not make a major > impact on N.O. I hope that I never have to deploy my KLR Evac Plans, > but at least I had a plan. > > Eddie (03' KLR "la poderosa") > > >
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klr evac from new orleans - epilogue - nklr
One thing to remember when using an auxillary generator in the event of a
power failure, either hook up what ever it is that you want electrified
directly to the generator, or if your generator has sufficient power, 7kW
and up and you back feed it through an outlet, BE SURE THAT YOUR MAIN
CIRCUIT BREAKER OR MAIN DISCONNECT IS DISCONNECTED. Your generator can
backfeed through your wirirng if it is not disconnected from the power
company and energize the the electric lines and transformers feeding your
house. This can lead to frying your generator when the power comes back on
or worse, fry a utility worker that may be working on the power lines.
I've had to respond to a SDG&E worker that was killed just by that method.
It wasn't very pretty.
Buddy
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>> [Original Message] > From: David Bell > To: Horton Oliphant ; klr
Our rural power companies do not ever plan ahead by trimming trees, so we lose power when the temp is in the 10's or 20's. I got tired of it once when I had all 5 of my grandchildren at the house and went to Home Depot and bought a Honda generator. I got home, de-boxed it, fueled it, put in oil, hooked it up to some aux. heaters and lamps and started it up, and of course the power came back on right at that minute.> Date: 9/4/2008 7:48:20 AM > Subject: Re: [DSN_KLR650] KLR Evac from New Orleans - Epilogue - NKLR > > While we don't have hurricanes in Northeast Texas, we do have ice storms.
It did not cost as much as I thought it would. So, if you live in an area where you lose power, it's a good idea to have one, in my opinion.> > However, I will say that it has come in very handy at times since then.
> > Glad you came out OK on the hurricane, by the way. Good luck. > > db > > > ----- Original Message ---- > From: Horton Oliphant > To: klr DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com> > Sent: Thursday, September 4, 2008 9:10:25 AM > Subject: Re: [DSN_KLR650] KLR Evac from New Orleans - Epilogue - NKLR > > > Good to hear that you are all right. I wondered how you were doing. > Sucks to be out of power but at least some things are coming back. Al > A13 Iowa > > eddiebmauri wrote: > > The crisis is over for now. All that I lack is some AC and TV, up to > > 9 long freaken days away. Thankfully, the storm did not make a major > > impact on N.O. I hope that I never have to deploy my KLR Evac Plans, > > but at least I had a plan. > > > > Eddie (03' KLR "la poderosa") > > > > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > ------------------------------------ > > List sponsored by Dual Sport News at: www.dualsportnews.com > List FAQ courtesy of Chris Krok at: www.bigcee.com/klr650faq.html > Member Map at: http://www.frappr.com/dsnklr650Yahoo! Groups Links > > >
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