How about observations....Me and a fellow Navy wife, our husbands were both volunteer firefighters and they were at the firehouse. 5 kids, 3 dogs and 2 cats huddled in my hallway. The sound of the wind howling. The silence of the radio. The Texaco roof in my front yard before the eye went through, and gone in the morning. The stars shining bright during the eye. Never before, or since, the black of night like it was then. No electricity anywhere.
Miles and miles of trees broken off 20 ft from the ground. 50 ft oak trees ripped out of the ground, or splintered like toothpicks. Stairs leading to nothing. Houses /boats sitting in the middle of the street.
Gun shots in the night. The smell of fresh cut wood, the sound of chainsaws in the daylight, the smell of charcoal grills cooking thawing food. Neighbors helping neighbors.
We lived in Hunley Park, across from the AFB, and I never realized how many trees we had in Charleston until they were laying on the ground.
there was no school for over 3 weeks, the school had been attacked by trees.
Halloween will always be remembered for our 15ft high/8ft wide "privacy fence" of brush out front.
Hugo was the first major storm that FEMA was involved with, and they didn't show up until about 3 days after the storm went through. National guard troops came in on day 3 I believe. I remember Charleston's Police chief made a statement on the radio the morning after the storm went through. Looters will be shot, we have no place to put them. The jail had been destroyed.
It was an experience that I don't really want to go through again, but it is one that I'm glad I went through.