I would like to say the cliché, "She Came, she saw, she conquered," but I cannot. A more accurate statement would be, She came, she barely saw, and she did anything but conquer.
As a new resident to the island of Oahu in the state of Hawaii I was very aware of how little my home island was, and how huge the ocean was that surrounded it. The other military wives on base assured me of my safety, but the news was terrifying me. I tried to play it cool. You know, laugh when the commissary ran out of water and canned food. Brush it off when Target put up signs saying they were out of water and would not be receiving anymore until the storms passed. But when my husband's squadron decided to evacuate all of their airplanes off of the island, I panicked. I wanted to go and tap his Skipper on the shoulder and let her know that he had just returned home from a seven month deployment, and despite my cool exterior, I was completely positive of my immanent death if I was left to brave not one but TWO hurricanes alone! (Iselle and Julio) Unfortunately, my husband enjoys his job, and we both enjoy his income so I kept quiet and complained to my husband Russ only.
* My husband flies a P-3 Orion, a very large plane. Because of it's size and wing span the wind can easily flip the plane over. The winds were expected to be 50 MPH, and the commanding officers of Marine Corp Base Kaneohe Bay decided it would be best to remove all the planes form the island and take them to the closest naval base on the mainland, Whidbey, Washington.
So I cried, sue me. Russ was packing up to leave and giving me instructions on what to do if the power went out, what to do if the house flooded, and to call him if I had to go to a shelter. So I started crying. We've technically been married almost a year but he was deployed for most of it, so with that being said I'm not comfortable being ugly around him yet. When I say I was crying I mean my crying was PG (shiny eyes, one glistening tear down my cheek, ABSOLUTELY no snot.) I couldn't ugly cry in front of him, especially if this was going to be the last image he had of me before Iselle and Julio blew me away.
By lunch on Thursday Russ was in the air, this was about 10 hours before Iselle was supposed to get to Oahu. I went on a walk to the beach closest to my house to look at the waves, no bigger than usual.

Six hours before the storm was supposed to hit the beach looked good enough to tan on. Maybe I was overreacting? I checked Accuweather (best weather source) on my phone, it did not even have 100% chance of rain anymore! When I returned back to my house I turned on the news and the weather map said it all. Iselle was going to go right under us, and Julio was going to go right over us, five out of our six islands were going to be fine. At this moment I realized, I might have over reacted. My bathtubs in my home were filled incase we lost power and water, every water bottle I owned, including a few pots were filled so I would have drinking water, (since all the other over-reactors out there bought all water) and I had a bag packed incase I had to evacuate. You know what I did the night Hurricane Iselle was supposed to kill me? Watched the movie Jaws, drank chamomile tea and passed out at 11 p.m. Now, I do not want to make the hurricane sound completely harmless. The Big Island had 22,000 people loose power and they had some 12 foot waves! But on Oahu (my home island) about 200 miles away, the palm tree in my yard lost some leaves. That's it. Thank you to my sweet friends and family that called to check on me during this scary time! The sunburn I got the day Iselle was coming is healing nicely.
Weather lesson: a hurricane needs warm water to grow and pick up speed. The reason Hawaii gets so few hurricanes is because our water is simply too cold. No matter how large the storm is it always down grades by the time it gets to us. In this case the storm hit the Big Island first, this island has many large volcanoes the storm had to go through. When the hurricane hit those and it was like Jackie Chan clothes lining a ninja. It was stopped dead in it's tracks and became a tropical storm. Hurricane Iselle and Julio came from the east, in 1992 Hurricane Iniki (the last hurricane to hit Hawaii) came from the south west by Guam. The water was very warm and the winds were extremely strong. Iniki caused 1.8 billion dollars worth of damage in Hawaii! INIKI FACTS
In summation, if you hear about a hurricane coming from the west heading for Hawaii buy me a plane ticket back to Georgia, but if it is coming from the west you should come and visit, the hotels will be cheap!
*Thank you Lord for keeping me and the rest of the Hawaiian Islands safe during the storms. I can laugh and joke but you're the only one who knows what the weather will do. I thank you for sparing me. Amen*