September 29, 2008

Sept 29

AVAILABILITY
FL04 - Available
FL05 - Available
FL06 - Available
FL07 - FEMA Base Camp Galveston, Texas

We have settled in at FEMA base camp on the tarmac at Galvston airport. During the storm there was 10 feet of water at this site and the fences that are still standing around the facility are covered with sea debris from the storm. The island was hit hard and many of the residents have lost homes, businesses, and some or all of their belongings. In true Texas fashion, the relief response is big. Our camp has gone up in a hurry, and it is an engineering feat. We are servicing federal relief workers, ARC, and many others.
The sunrises and sunsets here are beautiful, I can understand why this is a tourist destination when intact. The locals are friendly, and spirits remain high despite the destruction.
We are anticipating at least a thirty day assignment here, but are still staged and ready for wildland fire response. FL05 is back from Seqouia/King's Canyon, restocked and ready to go.
More updates in the near future, and please peruse the photos we have managed to compile.

Galveston sunrise and sunset


Galveston damage, sunset in camp





More damage pics





Galveston after Ike





Galveston storm damage




September 28, 2008

Sept 28

AVAILABILITY
FL04 - Available
FL05 - Available
FL06 - Available
FL07 - FEMA Base Camp Galveston, Texas

FL07 is set up in Galveston Texas. There will be more updates very soon.

September 18, 2008

Sept 18 - Stand-By Again

AVAILABILITY
FL04 - Available
FL05 - Hidden Fire Kings Canyon National Park
FL06 - Available
FL07 - Pre-Alert - Galveston, Texas

FL07 is once again on stand-by for Galveston Texas.
If deployed, we will build the camp then start crew rotations. I should know something in the next 24-48 hours. Everybody stand by again, you will be hearing from me.

dj

September 17, 2008

Sept 17

AVAILABILITY
FL04 - Available
FL05 - Hidden Fire Kings Canyon National Park
FL06 - Available
FL07 - UNAVAILABLE

Good Morning.  In west Texas right now.
It's a very long drive. Hit the road this morning at 0400, California time. We should be able to make it home tomorrow sometime. 
FL07 will become available again in about a week.

Have a great day.

dj

September 15, 2008

Sept 15

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - AVAILABLE
FL 05 - Pre Alert - KNP - Hidden Fire
FL 06 - AVAILABLE
FL 07 - AVAILABLE - Pre Alert for Texas

Good Morning everybody. Not much to report. Team 5 is on stand-by for the Hidden fire.
This morning we are headed to the Waffle House for breakfast. (it's a southern thing)

Today we sit and wait for the truck to be repaired. It sounds like we lost something in the transfer case. We have a couple of fishing poles, some catfish bait and a few bobbers. We found a very large red drum floatin' in the water. A red drum is a Gulf Coast Fish. We can see them chasin'minnows.

I'll keep ya'll posted on the happenin's

dj

September 14, 2008

Sept 14

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - AVAILABLE
FL 05 - AVAILABLE
FL 06 - AVAILABLE
FL 07 - AVAILABLE - Pre Alert for Texas

It is sounding like FEMA will close down our camp. They would turn over the incident to the State resources.

I'm not sure what is going on in Texas. At first we were all set to go to Beaumont....now I don't know who is going.

All this could change tomorrow. It could change in a day or two.




September 13, 2008

Sept 13 - Hurricane IKE Update

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - AVAILABLE
FL 05 - Pre Alert to the Gulf Coast - on stand-by for Texas
FL 06 - AVAILABLE
FL 07 - HURRICANE GUSTAV SUPPORT - Baton Rouge, Louisiana

**HURRICANE UPDATE**

Ike made land fall last night. Galveston and Port Arthur are being hit very hard. The storm surge is well above the flood stage. It is too soon to send in rescue personnel.

FEMA will be placing another support camp in the Houston / Galveston area, we are on stand-by for this camp. Basically just waiting for a location to build.

We left Baton Rouge before the wind and rain started. We are safe and dry. Just as soon as FEMA gives the go ahead, we will return to Baton Rouge to rebuild our camp. There is a slight chance the camp will moved to another location.

Dj

September 11, 2008

Sept 11 - EVACUATION

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - UNAVAILABLE - GULCH FIRE, SHF
FL 05 - AVAILABLE - Pre Alert to the Gulf Coast
FL 06 - AVAILABLE
FL 07 - HURRICANE GUSTAV SUPPORT - Baton Rouge, Louisiana

**HURRICANE IKE UPDATE**
We're runnin'. The weather dude says Ike is going to hit Galveston.....What?? Ike seems to be moving north faster than to the west. The outer band of rain and wind is already hitting the Louisiana coast line.

Check out this link...copy and paste it into your address bar.
http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/flt/t4/rb-l.jpg

FEMA is having us evacuate this camp. We will go rebuild it after Ike passes through.

FEMA will be building another camp in Texas. I'm not sure where, but we have been put on alert.

The new truck took a crap on us today. The transfer case is stuck in neutral. We moved the trailer with a Peterbuilt.....took the truck to a Dodge Dealer.....then waited for evacuation instructions. We are now enroute to a safer location.

Dj


September 09, 2008

Sept 9


AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - UNAVAILABLE - GULCH FIRE, SHF
FL 05 - UNAVAILABLE - ELMORE FIRE, SHF
FL 06 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 07 - HURRICANE GUSTAV SUPPORT - Baton Rouge, Louisiana

**HURRICANE IKE UPDATE**
It looks like Ike is drifting south. Everybody is still unsure of the exact path he will take. He is just now starting into the Gulf of Mexico. The warm waters of the Gulf should make things grow. The next 24 hours will reveal a lot more information. We have an evacuation plan in place. If the projected winds reach 40+mph, everyone in this camp will move north, away from here. There is just way too much debris to blow in the wind. A sheet of plywood flying through the air at 40mph could ruin your entire day.

After Ike blows through, we will start rotating personnel. Two weeks sitting here in the heat is enough for anybody.

The best thing about this area is the lack of flies. I have seen a few here and there, but for the most part....nothing. Mosquitoes are buzzing around every once in a while, but no flies.

Yesterday a very fast moving storm hit here, late in the afternoon. Wind, lightning, rain, wind and wind....did I mention the wind? Then as suddenly as it started....it stopped. The temperature rose back up, as did the humidity. It was like sitting in a giant steam bath. The only thing missing were the little fat men with white towels rapped around them. (ooh...that's a visual).

More storms are predicted for today. Right now it is hot and humid.

Dj

September 07, 2008

Sept 7 - Le Resort Baton Rouge

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 05 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 06 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 07 - HURRICANE GUSTAV SUPPORT - Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Hurricane IKE is headed this way. Evacuation plans are being developed. I have already pre-planned my run north....away from here. If IKE hits the Louisiana Coast....I will be in Dallas.

FEMA is negotiating another camp in Florida. There is a good chance we will be sending a unit to Florida.
Here is a couple of pics
of camp here, as it was being built.


45,000+ square feet of sleeping area - wood floors, AC...it is actually very very cold in the sleeping tent.


Frontline Medical...without the ClubMed Deck and Trees.
This area started as a mud pit. We hauled in 3" rock base...covered it in 3/4" road bed rock. The landscapers come in next week....by the time we get done, it will look like Better Homes and Garden.
Yo....ClubMed Members....We are kickin' it up a notch here in the south.

Dj

September 06, 2008

Sept 6 - Baton Rouge

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 05 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 06 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 07 - HURRICANE GUSTAV SUPPORT - Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Things are settling down here in camp. WOW!! What a major construction project. The sleeping tent/building is 45,000 square feet. That's bigger than a football field. All the tents have been set up on elevated plywood floors. They brought in road bed gravel and basically paved the roads. We watched some guys put up a chain link fence yesterday. 250 yards of fence in a couple of hours. It would have taken us a couple of weeks.

We are keeping a close eye on Hurricane Ike. They say Ike will move into the Gulf .... and begin to grow. We are preparing evacuation plans. I think we might just go back to Dallas for a couple of days if Ike hits here. This is reminding me of New Orleans two years ago.

Yesterday I met my first fly friend. She didn't stick around long. This camp is pretty clean.

FEMA folks were here yesterday. We passed our inspection with flying colors. They told us to be prepared for a long assignment.

We will start arranging crew rotation very soon.

Have a great day.....ya'll.

dj

September 04, 2008

Sept. 4 ~ Hurricane Update

AVAILABILITY
FL 04 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 05 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 06 - AVAILABLE - Pre-Alert to the Gulf Coast - Hurricane Support
FL 07 - HURRICANE GUSTAV SUPPORT - Baton Rouge, LA

Evacuees Return Home!

Tropical Storm Hanna sped up as it moved past the Bahamas on Thursday, and forecasters warned it may be a Category 1 hurricane when it hits the U.S. mainland.

Hanna may make landfall near the North Carolina-South Carolina state line late Friday night or early Saturday morning, according to the National Hurricane Center's five-day forecast.

Both states, as well as Georgia, have activated their emergency centers ahead of the storm, and North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley declared a state of emergency.

"It now appears Hanna will be a Category 1 hurricane when it hits the North Carolina coast early Saturday morning," Easley said in a news release. "Since the exact path is uncertain, everyone who lives in the coastal counties needs to be ready."

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford urged the voluntary evacuation of two northeast counties, Horry and Georgetown, as the storm approached.

"The suggestion is for people to look at this storm and make their own decisions," he said.

"Every one of us needs to continue to watch out in the Atlantic because this could be a dress rehearsal for a thing called Ike," he said, referring to Hurricane Ike, a Category 4 storm spinning in the central Atlantic, hundreds of miles from the U.S. coastline.

"Time will tell," Sanford said.

Hanna was about 625 miles south-southeast of Wilmington, North Carolina, at 5 p.m. ET Thursday, according to the hurricane center.

A hurricane watch was in effect from north of Edisto Beach, South Carolina, to Currituck Beach Light, including Pamlico Sound. See Hanna's projected path »

Hanna's maximum sustained winds were about 65 mph, the center said.

The hurricane center's advisory said wind and rain from Hanna would reach the U.S. coast well before the center of the storm and that dangerous riptides were expected to increase along the coast.

Meanwhile, Hurricane Ike, still hundreds of miles from the islands of the Caribbean, was a powerful Category 4 hurricane on Thursday. Its winds had dropped slightly, to 135 mph, but the center said Ike was still "extremely dangerous."

The hurricane center's five-day forecast map shows Ike arriving near the Turks and Caicos Islands and the southeastern Bahamas on Sunday. The center's advisory said, "It is too early to determine what land areas might eventually be affected by Ike, but interests in the southeastern Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands should monitor the progress of this system."

At 5 p.m. Thursday, Ike was about 505 miles northeast of the Leeward Islands, moving west-northwest near 14 mph.

Trailing Ike by about 1,600 miles in the eastern Atlantic was Tropical Storm Josephine. Josephine's winds had dropped to 45 mph, and the system was not forecast to make landfall any time soon.