On Tuesday, December 4, 2012, superstorm Pablo hit Dumaguete City strongest at around 5-7 pm. No electricity for an estimate of 31 hours. Drove around first thing in the morning at 6:30 am after the storm (Dec. 5). The streets and places all over the city looked devastating.
In our beloved Rizal Avenue, also popularly known as the Boulevard, a number of trees fell and got uprooted. Never thought typhoon winds could do that. It was indeed a stronger one than Sendong. But Pablo was stronger in terms of wind. Not so much flooding in the city but so many roofs got flown away, electrical posts fell down the streets causing danger to passersby.
It was bad but the good thing was we were at least prepared. We knew it was coming and we stayed home to be safe. Rescue teams were ready, radio stations broadcast hotline numbers for anyone who needed help. People volunteered even during the storm to help others risking their own lives.
see this guy?
he's having his picture taken
the Delta Ferry floating terminal dragged by the waves to the sea wall
another full-grown tree
electrical posts down
a security guard post blown meters away from its location
school campus
thrift market destroyed
this bench was originally facing the sea, and it's pure concrete