Update from Houston, for those interested. The only real problem they are having right now is electricity. CenterPoint Energy was caught with their pants down on this one. Normally, they have thousands of crews from out of state staged in Houston before a Hurricane arrives. They rolled the dice on this one, and waited to see what would happen. Bad decision. The crews are just arriving.
But, at least flooding has not been a big issue. The storm moved through too fast to cause any major flooding.
My sister and mom are both still without power, but my mom should get hers back first, since she lives in a Senior Community, which should get high priority. Her "village" has common areas with backup generators, including a large dining room. Residents can go there, sit in air-conditioned comfort, and drink cold beverages, and the dining room is not charging for meals right now, since the apartment kitchens are all-electric. The food there is very good.
My sister has gas cooking appliances, so she can cook. She filled a lot of zip lock bags with water and put them in her upright freezer before the storm, so her freezer should stay cold for a few days more. It was 80F in her house this afternoon, and all she has is a couple of battery operated fans. The HEB near her has backup generators, so they are open, and she can buy food -- and wander around the air-conditioned store a while.
Oh, but my sister is finally asking me to help her explore options for backup power. This is the second time in 2024 that she has lost power for multiple days. Of course, she will have to wait until winter to get any kind of whole house backup, because dealers/installers in Houston are price gouging in a major way, right now. I'm getting some pricing on a solar/battery system for my house in Dallas before getting a quote for her house in Houston.
CD