On Mandatory Evacuation

It seems that what is left of Gustav has made it’s way here now. It has rained since yesterday afternoon, fluctuating between a heavy rain and a light drizzle. We always can use the rain, and at least it is a “soaking rain” as the Husbear calls it.

But that’s not what this post is about. Well, not directly.

We had a great time in New Orleans—even if the crowds were lacking and the weekend was cut short due to the mandatory evacuation in preparation for Gustav.

Which is that this post is about—our experience up to and with the evacuation.

We didn’t have a newsworthy experience.

Which seems to have been the general consensus this time around as compared to the previous evacuation of New Orleans. This one went “smoothly”, which is a feat I indeed do feel to be newsworthy. To move how ever many people were moved (an estimated 2 million people for the area from what I last heard on the news) in an mostly orderly fashion to a completely different part of the country shows either: great planning and execution on some group or groups parts; or extremely dumb luck. I’m thinking luck only had a little to do with it.

It was very noticeable as New Orleans starting “closing down”. There were no crowds. Many businesses were preparing by boarding up their windows while leaving their doors open for those who were there.


“Trying to reason with Hurricane Season…”

The “straight” end of Bourbon Street was dead and closed long before the “gay” end. More than likely a result of the fact that it was Southern Decadence weekend after all. It was extremely odd to walk down Bourbon Street during what should be the busy hours, to have it all boarded up and essentially a ghost town.


An unusually empty Bourbon Street

Unlike some hotels in New Orleans, we weren’t kicked out of our hotel onto the streets with nowhere to go 2 days before the mandatory evacuation. This happened to some friends staying in other hotels in the French Quarter. Some couldn’t get their vehicles out of parking garages around town as the owners closed up shop and left, leaving many people having to find alternative means of transportation out of the city. Many people were at the airport for 12+ hours before their flights.

We waited until the day of the evacuation, leaving only a few hours before the actual “mandatory” order went into effect. Call us stupid for putting ourselves in potentially harms way, but having access to different weather, news, street webcams and local police agencies makes getting information and knowing what to do a lot easier these days. And if many of the French Quarter locals weren’t in panic mode and staying as long as they could, why should we bail and not give them our money?

Our hotel, the Omni Royal Orleans, did everything they could for us and other patrons of the hotel. We received timely updates from the hotel staff and managers as events were unfolding, preparing everyone for the eventual evacuation, all the while trying to provide what services they could to “keep things going” in the New Orleans tradition.

We didn’t have any problems getting home. In fact, there were only two real problems we noticed. One was that with so many people on the Interstates, every exit was full—lines at every gas station and restaurant, if they weren’t closed as well. Many gas stations were completely out of fuel, which would be understandable when you consider all the people on the road. We saw countless SUVs that had gas tanks strapped to their roofs.


Gas guzzlers bringing their own fuel…

The second problem was the lack of “advertising” about where to get onto the Contraflow lanes. Most of the traffic was in the standard travel lanes, and if you missed the VERY FEW options to get into the Contraflow lanes, you were stuck in traffic. Even when you had a chance to cross over, those crossways were usually blocked off.


The Contraflow lane needed a little more advertising…

Once we cleared the 20-mile bridge out of New Orleans we pulled out a map and started taking highways and back roads to get back home. The normally 10-hour drive took 16 hours this time, 4 of those to cover the first 40 miles out of New Orleans. It was actually a nice, pleasant trip through parts of the state we would never have seen otherwise. The last car I remember passing that had Louisiana tags on it was all the way up in Little Rock.


The Husbear trying to read the map…

The Husbear and I are both now worried that since something “bad” didn’t happen after this evacuation, people won’t leave the next time—as we’ve already heard people saying when interviewed on the news. I know it means not having money coming in for a few days (or longer), but if you live in someplace where this is a possibility and a reality, you save up for such events. Let’s just hope they won’t need to evacuate for a long, long time.

Until next time...
Erik

8 thoughts on “On Mandatory Evacuation

  1. Glad to hear things went relatively smoothly.

    My Aunt Geri and my cousin Jennifer have texted/MySpace’d saying they are okay, but they are really just camping right now. Most of Baton Rouge is without electricity and it looks like the city – NOT including the outlying areas – will get electricity by Saturday provided no further bad weather crops up. My sister-in-law, who lives about an half hour from BR, said they expect electricity at some point in the next three weeks.

    I haven’t heard anything from my grandparents or my Dad and his family, so that’s slightly worrisome. They weathered Katrina, so I know they are probably okay. I just wish cellular coverage would get back to normal so I could at least call and see what’s going on.

    There’s nothing like Cajun/Creole culture, but sometimes the price of admission is heavy.

  2. I am pleased you are safe and had a more or less “pleasant” experience with the evacuation. It is good to know that things went smoothly.

  3. Could you have stayed in the Omni for the duration? 🙂

    “Yes, I’d like a category 2 hurricane, two mimosas, and a really hunky bellhop. Thanks.”

  4. Despite the short trip and having to deal with the evacuation, I’m glad that you ended up having a good time and got out of there safe and sound.

  5. The secret to an enjoyable evacuation is a good attitude and sense of adventure. It only takes a decision. I know people who would have stressed and fumed (you probably saw some yourself)throughout the whole ordeal. I would have enjoyed the opportunity to see interesting new vistas between point A and point B.

    Growing up as I did in Florida, I knew many people who didn’t take hurricane warnings and evacuation “requests” seriously. Often things turned out to be not so bad. And yes, that lulls folks into a false sense of security. Then The Big one comes along, and all they have to worry about is paying for their funeral. Or something.

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