You're right - it's been pretty bad here in the islands. We've had a system of low pressure to the south of the island chain for weeks and it's kept the front from moving on. We haven't seen the sun for more than a 5 minute stretch in weeks. Here on Hawai'i island we haven't been all that bad - lots of ponding and flash food watches/warnings, landslides, bad road conditions, high surf, etc. I think the worst was a car accident my girlfriend was in 2 weeks ago in one of our famous 'horseshoe' gulches with her two daughters. She lost her 5 year-old; the other, 11 years old, was crushed from the pelvis down, broke both legs and her jaw but has gone through a myriad of surgeries and is doing well now. She didn't see the 'stream' of water moving across the road from the hills that wall the turn and hyrdroplaned, hitting a county bus. That's one of the really scary things out here - even if it isn't pouring cats and dogs, the land is already so saturated that you don't realize how bad, flooded and slippery the roads can be.
Kaua'i and O'ahu (on the other end of the archipelago) are eating it big time. Streams are wiping out yards - the dam that broke washed away entire households. This just isn't the kind of thing that happens here, you know? I mean -it's what we see on television that happened thousands of miles away. I know in comparison that we're very lucky - only 7 casualties from the dam breaking, 2 have been recovered so far. Only a few homes washed away to where, looking at the place now, you'd never think there was a home there once-upon-a-time. But still .. it's surreal.
But I guess I haven't answered your question - yes, we're good. A little damp, but ok.
