1 Year in Biloxi

Meant to post this yesterday, but didn’t have internet access. Today marks my one-year anniversary in Biloxi! On September 4th last year, I was pulling my fully loaded (and since deceased) Hyundai Accent into the parking lot of the Salvation Army Volunteer Village. One year, two cars, five-plus completed houses, 120 blog posts, and 2080 work hours later, what have I learned? What are the most memorable experiences? Conquered my fear of heights. Learned how to drive a stick shift. Started judo. Six months so far! Visited the Doo-Nanny and the Museum of Wonder in Seale, Alabama. Sang along to …

Goodbye to Gustav, Part 2

(Above) The first band of rain from Hurricane Gustav quickly approaches the Hands On base. As I mentioned earlier, I rode out Hurricane Gustav volunteering with Hands On in a Red Cross shelter at Stennis Space Center. Here are a few pictures and key moments.

Goodbye to Gustav

Back home after two days in a Red Cross shelter, I’m fine, and so is everyone that I’ve heard from. The damage, luckily, seems to be minimal here in Biloxi. I’m too spaced out to write much now, but here are the basics: I stayed with about half of Hands On Gulf Coast at a Red Cross shelter in Stennis Space Center, a huge complex on the west end of the Mississippi Gulf Coast (Stennis is where they build space shuttle engines and parts). I’m ready for some hot food that doesn’t come in a little can. The Red Cross …

Bracing for the storm

The approach of Hurricane Gustav made the mood yesterday — the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina — especially tense. No one’s sure how severely the hurricane will affect Biloxi; although it’s tracking towards west Louisiana, it could be a Category 4 or 5 when it arrives, bringing high winds and rain, although a Katrina-like storm surge is less likely. Many residents and businesses are boarding up windows and preparing to evacuate if necessary. I helped Patty board up her windows (no small undertaking from a single 25′ ladder). Yesterday and today, at the suggestion of David Perkes, he and I …

Packin’ Up Is Hard to Do

Hurricane preparations here are well under way. Unless the storm changes course, an evacuation order will probably come tomorrow, but the Coordination Center isn’t waiting around. Everything valuable is being packed up and taken to safer places inland. It’s a big and messy operation, but in a way it’s also a chance to clean house a little bit. There’s nothing like an evacuation to force you to take stock of what is important to you.

Hurricane Gustav

It developed a couple of days ago and now everyone’s talking about Hurricane Gustav! The storm is still in the Caribbean, where it has killed at least 22 people, but if it continues on its current course it could land pretty directly on New Orleans and/or the Mississippi Gulf Coast as a Category 3 or higher storm. We should know by Saturday or Sunday whether we need to leave. Hands On has a fairly well-developed evacuation plan and if they evacuate I’ll go with them to a shelter near Jackson. Since Tropical Storm Fay barely affected us, this would be …

Looking back: A Blitz Build for Ruth

Ruth has been a resident of East Biloxi all her life. Hurricane Katrina brought 8 feet of water into her home and shifted it off its foundation. Returning after the hurricane, Ruth stayed in the flooded home until she received a trailer from the First Presbyterian Church. Over two years later, her house was finally ready to build. Through the collaboration of volunteer organizations including Hope Force, Hands On Gulf Coast, and the East Biloxi Coordination Center, the house was blitz-built in approximately one week. The new house is handicap-accessible and features two bedrooms, an open living and dining room, …

A House for Carmen

Carmen’s house is a complex solution to a complex situation, and it’s been my primary house project over the past couple of months; new projects have been slow to come in, so I’ve had the opportunity to develop this one in detail, working in partnership with Jessie. Carmen’s husband, Clarence, has been living on this property since the 1960s, and he seems to have been tirelessly at work during that time; at its pre-Katrina peak, the property accommodated a house at the front (since torn down), a second, two-story house (torn down to the concrete foundation visible below), a rear …

4×100 FREE USA GOLD!

–World Record 3:08.24 –Nearly 4 seconds faster than the previous record –Eight one-hundredths of a second faster than the French –World record of 47.24 in the leadoff leg (by Eamon Sullivan of Australia) –Amazing comeback by anchor Jason Lezak –Maintains Michael Phelps’ chances for 8 golds WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!

Biloxi Post: Le Bakery

I believe I’ve mentioned Le Bakery before, but the world deserves to know more about this place, a sublime union of French and Vietnamese cuisine. It is, by far, my favorite restaurant in Biloxi, due to its delicious $3 vietnamese po-boy sandwiches (meat and veggies on a fresh-baked roll), bubble teas, and desserts. I recommend the following: a coconut curry chicken po-boy with an avocado-almond bubble tea and a bavarian cream turnover for afters. If you’re ever near Biloxi, head over to Oak Street and check it out. It’s so good that I’m not sure how I’ll go on living …