Re: Wild and hairy story for y'all!
Yep...taken from the deck of the Holland America Zuiderdam, parked next door that year.
Caymans had been walloped by Cat 5 Hurricane Ivan the year before - our visit was in September 2005 - and there was not much left untouched. ; I remember marveling at how torn up everything was, trees all dead from when the whole island went under water, beaches removed, buildings without roofs, watermarks on the 2nd floor walls...even a year later:
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It was already a bad year in 2004 - Charley (Cat 4) pulled a nasty on Florida's lower west coast before buzz-sawing right over Disney and out the other side. ; Frances (Cat 2-3) followed that act by inflating to 10 times the size of Charley, and parking itself over south Florida for nearly 3 days. ; Ivan had torn through the islands before unleashing on Pensacola. ; And Jeanne (Cat 3) capped a hack of a year by killing thousands in Haiti before crushing ashore within literally a few feet of where Frances had come ashore. ; Grand Cayman had been closed most of 2005, rushing to get cleaned up in time for the cruise season.
All I could think of in Cayman was how lucky we were during our hurricane run - lost some trees, no power for 7 days in Frances and 4 days in Jeanne...but nothing serious. ; Of course, 2005 had already started with quite a bang. ; Dennis (Cat 3) decided to drop in on a still recovering Pensacola to start things off. ; We all know about Katrina (Cat 4)- ironically its first US landfall was right over South Florida as a minimal Cat 1, which had us all breathing a sigh of relief it wasn't one of those nasty ones like the '04 canes...until it spooled up on the other side into a monster. ; We also pulled up to Key West right in the wake of Hurricane Rita (Cat 2-4), which left the streets 4 feet under, and the water had just cleared when we arrived. ; Boats were still sunk with masts sticking out of the water, or blown ashore, all around the bay:
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We literally were sailing around the same week Rita slammed into Texas...following her wake right through the Gulf of Mexico. ; By the time we were leaving Cozumel, we were just getting reports of the damage, and wondering if the ship would even be able to stop in Key West.
That cruise wrapped on October 1, dropping us off at home for a week of relaxation before hearing of a new hurricane passing into the Caribbean towards Cayman, then Cozumel - Wilma. ; No threat to us, since she was headed dead west, she spooled herself into the record-breaking strongest hurricane in pressure in Atlantic season history and winds topping 185MPH that made Katrina seem gentle. ; We watched as it moved into Cozumel, ripping them hard but fortunately dropping to a 4 just before it hit. ; Still...no worries for us...until it made a U-Turn, and followed our ship's itinerary right towards Key West...and though it had fallen to a Cat 2, it headed with amazing speed right for Florida. ; First it was going to the keys, then it was going to Tampa...then it decided to barrel through south Florida. ; Those on the west coast prepared for a serious Cat 2-3 landfall, while those on the east coast prepared for a rainy windy day, and a borderline tropical storm/Cat 1...since it would lose all its strength as it crossed the Florida peninsula. ; Ummm...not. ; Wilma brought full Cat 2-3 strength right through the heart of heavily populated Broward and Palm Beach counties, to the tune of $20 billion of damage. ; 9 more days with no power, destroyed deck and back yard, trees down everywhere, blocking roads, lots of roof damage, large high rise buildings with no windows. ; Couldn't really get anywhere by car for a week or so:
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...it was quite a send-off for 2005, hitting Florida with its 8th hurricane in just over 1 year!
However, there was one silver lining. ; There's always an upside - Floridians living in the heavily populated south have never really seen stars before. ; Oh, one or two slip through the heavy light pollution, the smog, the marine haze, or the heavy cloud cover...but that's about it. ; Seeing an actual sky full of stars, western-US style, just doesn't happen. ; UNLESS a Hurricane blows out all the lights, shuts down all of the pollution making structures, and blasts out all of the cloud cover and haze:
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That was the first time since leaving California that I saw stars in the sky that thick. ; Oh, and the last time too!
So, that's my cruise story to go with the photograph above.
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