Thursday, October 23, 2008

Visit to Wooster homecoming, then back to TN and the start of building the bridge

Wooster marching band during the homecoming game
Minton and I in our old cage on our hockey field

Minton, Lammy and I


The creek where we are building the bridge in TN

Scaffolding
Jerry taking a nap..what looks like a dead man in the leaves


Rock step building crew
Steps we built and set

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Getting interviewed by the Red Cross reporters
Jelly and I
What it looks like inside an ERV
The window I served many many clam-shells of ERV food out of
A fallen tree in the neighborhood I served, West Orange, TX

Back in TN

We are back in Chattanooga for the next month. For the past week and 1/2 I have been working on an ERV every day, lunch and dinner. I'm not sure if I already said that before. You could tell after awhile that my team was getting quite tired, so we're all looking forward to being back. Now I can actually enjoy my Halloween and the fall leaves! A lot of other teams were assigned for a second term on disaster. I didn't care what we ended up doing, but now that it's been 23 days since we first went down there, I'm happy to be back in TN! This weekend we have Columbus day off so Jelly, Jerry and I are renting a car and taking a road trip back to New Orleans. I will be visiting Kat and Ryan again as well as some of my other friends on different teams. Also have tickets for Citizen Cope on Sunday, ya, I can't wait for my mini-vacay! Until then...

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Bridge City, Tx


I only am showing these on my blog for the purpose of giving you all knowledge of what it looks like down here. We all know the news doesn't show the full truth ever on disasters like this. We felt guilty riding around Bridge City taking pictures because these are obviously people's homes and all that they have. The pictures were taken from inside our van, and only when people were not present. This is pretty much what it looks like in Orange as well, except contractors are beginning to pick of the trash put out on peoples' front lawns. Everyone's house where I have been serving on my ERV in West Orange is being mucked. No "whole" houses have been knocked down as I saw here in these Bridge City neighborhoods, all the walls are standing, but anything the water touched, has to be removed from the house.
Signs like this are in front of almost every house




These two are the worse I have seen


Now although many people have power and are back in their house, 80% of the people we are feeding are capable of getting food themselves or cooking it themselves, but they are still working all day long mucking and cleaning their homes. So after a long day of work, a hot meal from the Red Cross ERV is much appreciated. I cannot count the number of times I've been thanked. It is really something to see. I can't even really explain it in words. I wish I could show you the people I'm serving.