Cue Tuesday night.
Everyone in Cabarete was in full freakout mode. According to the news and the radio (neither of which I have access to from my television and radio-less apartment), Hurricane Ike was set for a direct hit on the north coast. I was still a little skeptical. It was due to hit sometime Saturday, way too far in advance to know anything for sure. As the week went on it seemed like the
When I came home from work Friday afternoon my apartment door was wide open. Oh sh-. That was my first thought. Then I walked in and found my landlord’s son taping X’s on all my windows in preparation for the hurricane. That’s when I knew for sure we weren’t getting hit directly. It was definitely jinxed. Saturday morning came around, the windsurfing class I help with was cancelled, unbeknownst to me and Derek, my sister’s boyfriend who lives here now. We showed up and there were pretty good sized waves so we went swimming. Dominicans thought we were nuts, but we remembered the vitals of swimming, don’t swim against an undertoe, swim parallel to shore, et cetera. There was a slight riptide but nothing dangerous. That and we could touch the ocean floor at all times.
Later on we went to an American owned bar to watch the Notre Dame –
So, happy hour at this bar is 198 pesos (about 6 dollars) for all you can drink beer for two hours (timed perfectly to coincide with the football game). Somewhere in those two hours I must not have noticed (even though it was an open air bar), but Ike showed up, despite being 300km north of us. I didn’t notice anything until the satellite feed crapped out at the end of the game. As we left it was absolutely pouring. I stubbornly refused to believe I was wrong, calling the rain “drizzle.” At least Derek was on my side.
Thankfully one of the colmados (like a neighborhood store) near my apartment was still open, using candlelight to operate. I bought a small bottle of rum and the guy at the counter said “Good idea, for the cold.” For the cold? It’s like 78 degrees. I guess that’s cold to them.
Soon the wind showed up and I was a little glad that I had X’s taped on all my windows in my apartment. All the girl volunteers gathered in the apartment next to me, so I dropped in on that for a while…until the nail polish came out. I took a walk to the beach to see if there was any storm surge. There was a little, with the rising waters creating little lagoons on the beach, but it didn’t pose a threat to the bars and shops right on the beach. The wind howled all night while the rain pounded my ceiling and a chorus of frogs going nuts tried to keep me up all night. I still think Ike was pretty wimpy. But if this is how a storm 300km (sorry I don’t feel like doing the math to convert that to American ) to the north affects us, I still can’t imagine what a direct hit would be like.
5 comments:
I thought you guys told me all you had was rain - not any wind to deal with. Anyway, will you please be careful with all your risky activities - swimming while hurricanes are around and walking the beach by yourself at night.........I have enough to worry about with all of you guys down there during Hurricane season!
Clarification:
1)I wasn't swimming in a Hurricane. a) The hurricane technically never hit us. Just the remnants.
b) It was about 6ish hours before the storm arrived.
2) I didn't walk to the beach by myself.
I am glad that Hilary has take on on the maternal role as I am too busy at the moment being a daughter........
For the record,I do not think you and Derek should be swimming in a storm, either....
However, who did you walk to the beach with????????
i think its about 185 miles. anyways glad your surviving the storm. i sent you a package im sure its delivery will be delayed a while. and yea...swimming in pre-hurricane surf may not be the smartest, makes me think of those kids at the virgin gorda. also liked the comment about the bahamas getting Tina'd. stay dry.
I am also busy, but still find time to worry (I just have a tough time finding time to checking in). Glad to know you're still alive and kickin. Please be safe.
Thank you.
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