I was hoping to hear from you! When they started talking about Matagorda county for a landfall point yesterday I thought of you down on the coast. Glad you hear you've got a safe spot to hole up in. We.. don't. NWS now says my area of far west Houston will have 100 mph winds. Last time that happened was 1983 with Alicia, and the trees are a whole lot bigger now. Guess there's a reason we have insurance - including flood.
Catch y'all later. I've got a ton of work to do today. Be safe out there and don't forget your pets!
We're planning to ride this thing out at home, pets and all. Lucky for us we live and work at a VERY sturdy hotel complex. The buildings are all steel and concrete, and we have never flooded, even in storm surges of hurricanes past. I'm still not looking forward to our visit from Cousin Ike, though. We have the luxury of moving to interior parts of the hotel that have no windows, so that will keep us safe from flying glass if any windows do manage to get broken. I am, however, worried about several of our friends who live in town. They do wildlife rescue and rehab and have so many animals on their properties that they can't move all of them to shelters. Also, in TX, animals are sent to shelters apart from their humans, so the rescuer/rehabbers can't expect the animal shelters to take care of raptors and reptiles, so they will have to ride it out in regular homes. These homes have been through hurricanes in the past and have managed just fine, so hopefully they're sturdy enough to make it through Ike. Another friend of ours raises birds and can't possibly move their 200 parrots, so I'm hoping that they make it through OK.
As of now, Ike is supposed to make landfall about an hour down the coast from us, so please keep us in your thoughts and prayers. Our town is not under mandatory evacuation, so that's one good thing. I'll keep y'all posted as new news is available.
Ghilly
Harris County (Houston) and surrounding coastal counties are now under a Hurricane Watch. The following message is from the National Weather Service:
IT IS RECOMMENDED YOU EVACUATE WITH YOUR PETS. BE SURE TO TAKE A
PET CARRIER...LEASH...VACCINATION RECORDS...AND FOOD FOR YOUR PET.
IF YOU EVACUATE TO A SHELTER...YOUR PETS WILL BE BOARDED AT A
SEPARATE FACILITY.
I'll take a California earthquake any day over a hurricane!
Good luck!
You can't stay in a state park during a hurricaine, though.
We'd have to hunker down at home. No way we'd abandon the dogs. If we were in a flood prone area...I don't know what we'd do, but it wouldn't involve abandoning the dogs.
I'm so sorry you're going through this again!
Crates are always good for safety reasons, but like you, are dogs are just large enough that we couldn't fit 2 crates in our vehicles. It's mostly people that need to use public disaster shelters who will need to use crates. Shoot, if we didn't have anywhere to go, we'd just pack up the camping gear and stay in a state park until it was all over. No worries about shelters or motels that won't accept pets. I'd rather live in the truck and keep the pets with us than abandon them or have them quarantined off in a different room from me at a shelter, but anything is better than leaving pets behind to fend for themselves.
Guess I'd better get started pulling in all the flyaway stuff outside. Again. We've got serious hurricane fatigue around here.
I've often wondered what owners of large dogs do in these situations. With our 3 big boys...there is no way we could go anywhere. Yes, we have crates...but no vehicle big enough to transport them all.
I'm glad its not an issue for us, either.
omg that post really scared me, in the Uk we dont have this sort of weather, i hope you will all be safe pets included x