THE DAY AFTER HANNA
The trees were blowing and it was raining hard this morning at 5 am when we reported for our first live shots. What a difference a few hours makes! Hanna wasn’t expected to be a big storm or hang around very long and she lived up to that forecast. By Noon, there was barely a cloud in the sky and the beach is filled with people taking advantage of the sun, blue skies and slight breeze.
While walking the beach and looking for someone to take my picture in the ocean, I bumped into Paula and Jay Morris from Raleigh, NC. I asked them to snap a shot of me, but quickly realized they had an interesting story to tell, so I turned the camera on them. Jay and Paula were just married in Minnesota last week — that’s where Paula grew up. Initially, like many newlyweds, they planned to go to Cancun for a honeymoon. But their plans were canceled because of Hurricane Gustav. Paula and Jay decided instead to stay close to home and as far away from Gustav as they could. So they made their way to Myrtle Beach, not realizing that a smaller storm named Hanna was attempting to wreck their Plan B Honeymoon.
Good news for the Jay, Paula and everyone else on the Carolina Coast that Hanna was a very minor storm. Twelve hours after landfall and you wouldn’t even know she was ever here. The beaches are busy, the pool is full and life is back to normal here on the Grand Strand of South Carolina. What a perfect day to cover the aftermath of a Tropical Storm.
Tags: Hurricane
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Thankfully the storm’s whipping winds and rain didn’t linger long enough over the Southeast to cause much more than some isolated flooding and power outages. I am sure everyone there can breath a sign of relief.
Hanna was a wash in South Eastern Virginia. We’re 20 miles inland and got little rain and less wind. Disappointing.
Given the projected track of Ike, this is a question that has been nagging at me for years. What do the troops at “Gitmo” do in preparation for storms like this, and what about their charges incarcerated there?
What is the procedures the military uses to “lockdown” Guantanamo during the storm(s)?