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The Pedersen family during a vacation this year |
“I stayed up Saturday night watching the water inch closer. About 5:45 in the morning, the water level passed our front tree. Shortly after, the power went out. I immediately woke the family. We started moving electronics and valuables upstairs. We also frantically cleaned out a section of the garage for my daughter’s car, which wasn’t under full coverage insurance. Little did we know, it wouldn’t make a difference. By 7:15, it was coming through the front door. As the water continued to climb, our immediate neighbors came over due to having a one-story house and two small children. My neighbor and I then went to check on other neighbors, including the elderly couple across the street. It was a surreal scene with 4 feet of water in the street, people standing knee deep on their front porches, and others having fun floating in pool floats.
Their neighborhood on Monday |
“After 36 hours without sleep, I fell asleep on my friend’s floor while waiting for my wife to check on a potential place for us to stay. When I woke up at 4:30 a.m., reality set in that this wasn’t all a nightmare. A quick glance at the TV news showed that another band of rain had dumped more water on our area during the night. Checking the water level gauge of Cedar Bayou, it had surpassed the 500-year flood level and was continuing to rise. I pulled up the Devinwood Facebook page and immediately realized how much worse the situation was. Several families were citing waist-deep water inside their homes and begging for rescue. I didn’t have a boat, but I thought maybe I could find a rescue team to help. So I jumped in our borrowed vehicle and ran up to the Cedar Bayou bridge. It was under water on both sides and the current was very strong. More and more volunteers showed up, but it was pretty apparent that the current and water level weren’t going to permit us to cross or safely deploy boats.
A view of the Pedersens' house from a boat |
“It’s been an exhausting week. To make it worse, talk of looting and people being held up at gunpoint has my already beaten-down neighbors nervous that what little they have left is exposed. To try to provide them with some peace of mind, I set up a checkpoint to monitor in/out privileges to the neighborhood. Everyone has been extremely grateful. We now have a rotating shift and multiple people on post at any given time. According to Baytown police officers who we are working with, we are the only neighborhood with this sort of checkpoint. My neighbors can’t get back to their homes due to the water still being 4 feet deep in some places, but at least they have one less thing to worry about. I hope and pray they are getting some rest as our journey of rebuilding hasn’t even begun yet.”
“We have two dogs (Khloe and Slinky) and three cats (Maverick, Snow and Batman). When we left on Sunday we got them all out except Batman, who we couldn’t find. I went back on Monday to find him, but I couldn’t. My daughter was ready to swim back herself that evening to find him, but the water was rising again. Finally after a second trip back on Tuesday, I found him hiding inside my daughter’s mattress. He had dug a hole through the bottom of her box spring. My daughter was hysterically happy when Daddy brought Batman home. She woke up from a dead sleep to see me standing over her with her cat.”