Monthly Archive for September, 2008

Recapping The Houston Trip

First off, let me thank the folks at Crimson House Ministries as well as Omar & Misty Lara for donating a few boxes’ worth of school supplies. They are going to be put to good use and are much needed at this point in time.

As for me, where do I begin? The reason I went down to Houston in the first place, as you may remember from an earlier posting, is that my friend Mark Hobson — the COGOP state youth director in Texas and a counselor for his local school district — posted a request for help with supplies and manpower. Normally I would send money or something, but I felt the good Lord tell me to go and I did. Thanks to those that in essence went with me, with prayer support.

To be honest, there wasn’t much in the way of manual labor to do this weekend, which was a good thing in the sense that the people who needed help originally ended up getting most of what they needed cleaned up. Most of my time was spent doing smaller tasks to help people get back to normal, ranging from cleaning out moldy refrigerators to simply talking with someone and offering them an encouraging word.

Yesterday after Mark came home from work we went to a couple schools in Seabrook, one of the hardest-hit areas. A counselor there said that over one hundred kids from that school alone were homeless. Just imagine to be a kid and be expected to go to school, and you have nothing but the clothes on your back. I can’t even begin to fathom how traumatic the past two and a half weeks have been for some of these kids.

It’s gotta be tough on the older folks, too. The elderly can barely stand the heat, and in some areas with electricity not due to be restored until November at the earliest, their only recourse is to camp out in their front yards.

Driving through Galveston on Monday was a surreal experience. On the south end of the causeway, boats whipped about by Ike’s surge found their way into either the median of the freeway or hung up on the barriers. Streets were littered with debris and it’s going to take Galveston months to fully recover. The neighboring island, the Bolivar Peninsula, is still off-limits to everyone including residents.

All in all, Houston is the U.S.’s fourth-largest city, and while most of Houston proper was spared enormous damage, a LOT of the city’s residents are still struggling to cope in the aftermath of Ike.

It was a wonderful experience to be able to meet some good people this weekend, help out with what I could, and even see Eagle Eye with Mark. God bless the folks down there and I hope to return and find the place in much better shape, and the people finally healed from the horror they have been through in the past weeks.

Galveston County Hurricane Damage Photos Posted


Where a house once stood, there is a perfect view of another house completely destroyed.

The trip to Houston is nearly complete, and you are invited to check out the photos I have shot from trips to Clear Lake Shores, Pasadena, Galveston and Seabrook in my photo section, here.

I will have a full recap of my trip tomorrow night after I arrive in Springfield.

Please be reminded that any use of my photos without permission violates the license under which they were published. Thank you for being respectful of that.

Houston Trip – Sunday Recap


If not the storm surge or the wind that destroyed property, Ike used other means to do so.

I have posted a small gallery of Saturday’s cleanup and tour of the communities surrounding Mark’s place here in Galveston County, TX.

Today was a very good day. I think the mercury reached 90 here again, but we plugged along with church this morning in a building that had no A/C and no lights. One of the members of Oak Meadows Community Worship Center, Mark’s church in South Houston, brought a generator and powered a fan that brought the thirty people that showed up as much relief from the heat as it could.

There we sat, thirty of us, in the youth room near the front entrance of the church, in six makeshift rows of five folding chairs each, and four in a row at the back. The sanctuary was too dark and half the congregation couldn’t make it due to obvious reasons — but thirty people plugged along and had church.

Mark’s message was good — it was about Jesus calming the storms in our lives — but for me the highlight of the day was singing “Amazing Grace.” It’s my favorite hymn of all time, and it has had different meanings to me through the years…and I gained some new perspective on the song by hearing these people who had been through a major traumatic experience sing through many dangers, toils and snares I have already come…’twas grace that brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home. What a wonderful experience. And meeting the folks at Oak Meadows was great too, God bless ‘em all.

After lunch we headed back to the church to help clean out the kitchen. Just use your imagination to think about what a kitchen would become after two weeks without power….yeeeeeaaaaah.

To my surprise, no one from the church really needed help as they had worked for the past two weeks to remove debris from their yards, or some of them just didn’t really suffer much damage at all. To that end, praise God that they are returning to a sense of normalcy.

I am finding out there are some good places to eat here. Kim Son (I think that’s how it’s spelled) a couple blocks from the Toyota Center had some good Chinese food…the sweet and sour pork made me feel a little raggedy though.

Tomorrow is gonna be my last day here, and it will be a good one. Mark goes back to work as a counselor for the alternative school in Webster, and while he’s working I’ll be driving around Galveston if I can get out there, and taking some photos. If not I’ll probably hit up Baybrook Mall and try to get some photos of storm damage elsewhere.

After Mark gets off work, we’re gonna help out with Operation Crayon, where we hand out donated school clothes and supplies to kids and families in the district who escaped the storm with only the clothes on their backs. I am really looking forward to that.

Houston Trip – Saturday Recap

To give you an idea of how close we are to the area affected the worst by Ike, League City sits just west of Kemah and only 20 miles NW of Galveston. It’s right off Galveston Bay so you can imagine there were parts of the area that got hit pretty hard.

Clear Lake Shores is a little island separated from the mainland by an inlet, and it was as recent as late this week that police were restricting access to the island for residents only. The guards were gone today so we were able to get onto the island and help one of Mark’s co-workers, and to get to her house we had to dodge massive piles of damaged personal belongings ranging from couches to refrigerators and pictures. Not only that, but we passed a multitude of sunken boats and yachts…and we passed some houses that had yachts sitting in their yards, at the intersections of roads, etc. Pretty surreal.

We helped Mark’s co-worker Nancy remove plywood that she had used to board up her stained glass windows and also helped hand out some Salvation Army meals to the neighbors who were still throwing stuff out onto piles for dump trucks to come by and pick up. We met many neighbors and they are all great people, and I can tell you if there is one positive that comes out of a crisis like this, it’s the fact that people band together and help each other. That was really evident today and it was neat to be a part of it.

After that was over, we took a little drive through the town of Kemah and saw the Kemah Boardwalk, which to say the least is not open for business. After that we went through Seabrook and saw even bigger piles of furniture, clothing, refrigerators, tree limbs, you name it. And the neighborhoods smell horrible…all the mold from the water damage has a sickening smell to it. As such the folks cleaning up were wearing dust respirators and taking multiple trips back and forth.

You get the feeling that in effect the stories of people’s lives up to before Ike hit are what is sitting on the side of the road when you drive by, and that’s really sobering. It hit me hard when I saw a pile of toys and stuffed animals in one family’s yard and you know there is a kid in there whose young mind isn’t ready to even begin comprehending something like this. It’s overwhelming to a point just to think about that.

Even two weeks after Ike hit, a lot of the neighborhoods we passed through still have no electricity or running water. As a result, schools have opened up their gymnasium showers for free, but as for living arrangements, it’s so hot in some of the houses that the people are living in tents in their front lawns. As we passed Dolphin Avenue in Seabrook today I saw a young woman with her child sitting in a tent, and staring blankly…as if they just wait it out and time will heal everything.

The most eerie thing I saw today was an entire apartment complex gutted, with cyclone fence constructed around it. Instead of being full of cars, the parking lot was full of mattresses, splintered wood, cabinets, more tree limbs, personal belongings — just a mess. The place had been declared uninhabitable to the point residents cannot even re-enter to retrieve their personal belongings. What a nightmare.

We passed houses with large spray painted red circles with an X in the middle. Just add two and two together on that one…no one will ever live in those houses again.

We helped some more folks over in Pasadena remove their fenceposts and I pruned some tree limbs that were looking pretty ugly, all the while fending off a neighbor’s mini-pinscher. Hey, if helping someone means helping them get their backyard to some sort of normalcy then so be it. After we were done there we ate at a barbecue joint, and I stuffed myself on a pulled pork sandwich and some good fries.

Tonight Mark and I just hung out, and headed to a movie theater to go see Eagle Eye. It was alright.

On the agenda for tomorrow, and this will be interesting, is that Oak Meadows Community Worship Center (Mark’s church) has decided to have church. Praise God! Only thing is, there is no electricity and no A/C in the building. The pastor has suffered a health setback so this means Mark gets to moderate the service. It should be a good one, and their first since the hurricane — hopefully it provides a touch of normalcy to some people whose lives have been topsy turvy over the past two weeks.

We’ll more than likely use tomorrow to ask folks from their church if they need help with anything and just give them a hand. I’m sure we’ll receive a few requests.

I have shot some decent photos, but alas, Mark does not have Wi-Fi in his apartment and even though my laptop is tethered to my iPhone, the data network is horribly spotty for obvious reasons. The best connection I can get is GPRS, which for you non-tech gurus is roughly the equivalent of dial-up speeds.

Thanks for the prayers, it’s been cool down here so far, and I am driving back up on Tuesday.

Helping Out In Clear Lake Shores

So it’s 91 degrees out here, but thank God that the humidity is nonexistent. We’ve been helping one of Mark’s coworkers clean up a bit by moving some plywood boards off the windows, handing out some Salvation Army meals and just chatting it up with folks who have a good story to tell.

I’ve got some good photos — seen some unbelievable stuff so far like yachts resting against houses, piles and piles of personal belongings on the streets, etc.

But everyone’s persevering through this okay…I thought this was pretty neat.

Live From League City, It’s Friday Night

I arrived in Houston around 6:45 and I knew I was getting closer when I passed FEMA, Red Cross and OEM trucks on I-45.

Coming into Houston was weird…there wasn’t much traffic but there is still the snapped power pole here and there…and even a few billboards ripped.

Haven’t seen the damage down here on the waterfront yet but we will be helping some folks tomorrow.

As for right now, I am sitting in Esteban’s Cafe and Cantina with Mark and I just polished off three enchiladas, and no mom, I am not at the cantina.

So Close…

5:05 pm, Huntsville, TX — I am about 60 miles away from Houston at this point.

Just filled up the car with gas at $3.70/gal for premium. That is not bad considering what happened here a couple weeks ago.

605 miles loggged, I can taste it now.

McAlester, Oklahoma

11:34 am, McAlester, OK — I just passed an exit for Electric Avenue. I am not kidding. Guess I better rock down there.

258 miles logged so far, nearly 480 to go. Wheeeeeeeee. 170 miles to Dallas.

Here is the Fail of the Afternoon, if you can make out what the message under the Phillips 66 sign says. Whoever buys three hot dogs for that price is getting a raw deal

And I’m Off…

6:38 AM, Springfield, MO – Beautiful morning here in Springfield, and the sun is just coming up to the east. It’s gonna be a nice drive.

Overheard at Colton’s Steakhouse last night during the JRA men’s choir gathering, which I was invited to and accepted:

Sam Coryell: “The route you’re gonna want to take is I-44 to Big Cabin, then go south.”
Wally Davenport: “Do you think the people of Big Cabin watch a lot of Little House on the Prairie?”

Only Wally. Sheesh.

Houston Trip (And Liveblog) Begins Tomorrow at 6 AM

In just a few hours, I will begin my roadtrip to League City, Texas — at 6 AM to be exact. I’m packed and ready, except for my electronic and photographic gear. The back seat of my car is packed with school supplies to be delivered, and I’ve packed a bunch of old clothing to wear while working. I’m excited but I’m beat so I think I’ll sleep well tonight.

My route will take me west on Interstate 44 from Springfield to Big Cabin, Oklahoma — where I will exit south onto US Highway 69 and follow it to its merger with 71, then continue on 71 into Dallas…and from there it’s I-45 southeast from Dallas to Houston and then League City. The trip should take around twelve hours, not including food and rest stops.

I will also be liveblogging from my iPhone, which means that I can also upload photos as well. Be sure to check the blog frequently this weekend as I will be updating it every couple hours or so.

Keep me in your prayers tomorrow and through the weekend as I do what I feel the Lord telling me to do!