We were about 4 hours from home, on our 20 hr road trip home from North Carolina when I got a text from my neighbor. It said, "Are you guys home yet?" I texted "No, but will be soon." She texted, "We are getting a crazy storm here, and your playset just blew away!" Our playset is very large, metal, and very heavy. We have had many windstorms in Iowa since we've had it and it's never budged. Hearing that it had blown away, out of sight, made us realize that this storm was huge!
Since we were still driving that direction, we started looking more closely at the radar and future cast. We started seeing things pop up like "Massive Derecho slamming Iowa". I said to Jon, "What the heck is a derecho?? Apparently, that's what this is!" The storm on the radar was big, growing in size, and headed right towards us. We weren't sure what to do. Do we pull over somewhere and ride it out on the side of the road? Do we try to find a safe store or something to go inside? What if we do that and the roads get blocked by debris and we aren't able to make it home?
We decided to pull over to the side of the road and said a prayer together that we would know what to do and what the best choice would be. After a few minutes Jon said, I feel like we should re-route and take back roads and try to go around the storm as much as possible. At the end of such a long road trip, adding an extra hour + to our drive didn't sound great, but we felt like it's what we should do. As we drove, we could see the clouds darkening and getting closer and we watched this massive storm head towards us on the radar. It was moving really fast. When it became apparent that we were not going to be able to miss the whole thing and we would still hit a small portion of it, we pulled over at a small gas station to do one last bathroom trip before we pushed through.
In the time in took for the 6 of us to quickly go to the bathroom, it went from being cloudy and calm outside to crazy winds whipping everything around. We ran to the car with the kids screaming and hurried and closed the doors and buckled in. The next 20 min we drove through some crazy winds and rain, but were able to get through pretty quickly and unscathed.
As we drove the rest of the way home through the storm ridden areas, it was like dejavu. The downed trees and powerlines and debris looked just like the hurricane damage we had driven through one week earlier in North Carolina. What in the world?? Did a hurricane just hit Iowa??
When we got home, we found our playset several houses down in someone else's backyard. Our garage was dented in by the wind. Our porch furniture had been blown away but the neighbor kids had helped gather it. Many neighbors had a lot of siding and roofing damage, but thankfully ours held up. Fences were destroyed, trees toppled, corn crops flattened, trampolines and playsets blown all over the place, patio furniture and pillows everywhere, trash bins toppled with trash everywhere, semis overturned on the highway- it was crazy.
We also came home to another fun surprise. The power was out and since we had planned on being able to get in our garage to get into our house and didn't have a spare key with us, we were locked out of our house. So here we are, dirty, hot, feeling gross, at the end of two straight days of driving and we're locked out of our house with no power. Several neighbors came over to offer help but we weren't able to get in for a little over an hour. When we got in, we faced the realization that we had no food really- since we had no power and had depleted a lot of stuff before vacation, and no hot water to shower or clean up with. We decided that if the power wasn't back on in the morning, we were going to drive up to MN to stay with family.
Sure enough, the next morning, we still had no power. We kept expecting/hoping it would come back on but decided we might as well start driving and if it came back on we'd just turn around. As we drove, we saw even more of the storm damage- flattened crops, cars/trucks off the road, freeway signs blown over or broken in half, destroyed grain silos.
We stayed in MN for 3 days total until we finally got a text from my neighbor that the power was back on. On day 2 in MN, we had a little scare when I saw a friend's facebook post that they had forgotten to empty their freezer ice tray and it was leaking all over their floor. We also hadn't emptied ours so I was worried our wood floors were going to be ruined so Jon jumped in the car to drive the 3 hours home to go take care of it. Thankfully, on the way he was able to get ahold of his cousin Jason and he and the bishop were able to come over and take care of it for us! Thank heavens! Jon was able to turn around and come back.
The text came from my neighbor at 4:30am in the morning and as soon as all the kids were up, we headed back home! We were so ready to just be in our house!
We got home and had some clean-up in the fridge and freezers we had to do with the ruined food but it could have been worse. Thankfully, before we left to MN, we were able to drop off our most expensive cold items at a friend in the ward's and they kept in in some extra space in their fridge/freezer for us!
The after math of this derecho has been crazy! Billions of dollars of corn crops were destroyed. Clean up efforts are still going on around the state. Our school was delayed starting because of the storm. Some people were out of power for 3 weeks! On week two, Jon went with some volunteers from the Stake (Mormon Helping Hands) and helped with some clean up in a neighboring city. Cedar Rapids, a city 2 hours from here that we used to drive through frequently on the way to MN from the QC lost 50% of their trees canopy and had tons of damage to buildings/structures/etc. What was even crazier was how little national news coverage this got. It was ridiculous, in my opinion. We had winds reach that of a category 3 hurricane in some places, many homes, businesses, crops, etc. were devastated in this storm most people have never even heard of, and all the news cares to report about is politics and Covid. It's been pretty frustrating.
In the aftermath, we are incredibly grateful it wasn't even worse than it was. We are grateful we were kept safe as we drove through it! 2020 has been a crazy year and now we have an Iowa Hurricane (Derecho) to add to the list!
A few internet photos of the storm and damage:
No comments:
Post a Comment