GOVERNOR, MORE THAN 16 HUNDRED PEOPLE HAVE BEEN RESCEUED SINCE LAST WEEK. A MAINE WOMAN WHO NOW LIVES IN THE FORT MYERS AREA - IGNORED THE MANDATORY EVACUATION ORDERS - SHE HAD TO SWIM TO SAFETY WITH HER THREE-MONTH OLD SON. WMTW NEWS 8'S JIM KEITHLEY IS HERE TO SHOW US HOW SHE DID IT. CALLIE BROWN GREW UP IN SKOWHEGAN - HER PARENTS STILL LIVE IN MAINE. SHE SAID WHEN HURRICANE IAN HIT LAST WEEK - IT GOT SO BAD - SHE THOUGHT THEY WEREN'T GOING MAKE IT. CALLIE BROWN SHOOTING THIS VIDEO LAST WEDNESDAY SHE AND HER PARTNER CHAD DUCKWALL LIVE IN FORT MYERS - THEY HAVE A THREE MONTH OLD SON - CHARLIE. WHEN HURRICANE IAN HIT -THE FAMILY RETREATED TO THE ATTIC...WATER KEPT COMING. <NATS> CALLIE DUMPED THE CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS AND PACKED HER SON IN ONE OF THOSE PLASTIC TOTES AND CHAD PUT THE CAT IN ANOTHER PLASTIC STORAGE BIN AND THEY FLOATED AWAY...HOPING TO REACH A NEIGHBOR WHOSE HOUSE WAS AT HIGHER GROUND. <SOT-CALLIE BROWN/ESCAPED HURRICANE IAN-14.07.23> "TERRIFYING. THE MOST TERRIFYING THING I'VE EVER GONE THROUGH MY ENTIRE LIFE." <SOT-CALLIE BROWN/ESCAPED HURRICANE IAN-14.07.28> "I DIDN'T KNOW IF WE WERE GOING TO MAKE IT TO BE TOTALLY HONEST. I REMEMBER LOOKING AT CHAD AND JUST SAYING, I DON'T WANT TO DIE. I DON'T WANT TO DIE." THE SWIM THROUGH WATER TEN FEET DEEP WAS HARROWING TO SAY THE LEAST <SOT-CALLIE BROWN/ESCAPED HURRICANE IAN-14.07.36> "INSTINCTS KICKED IN YOU KNOW PEOPLE ASK - HOW DID YOU THINK OF A STORAGE TUPPERWARE CONTAINER - AND I DON'T KNOW. I JUST LOOKED AROUND WHAT WAS IN MY ATTIC AND I WAS LIKE - PLASTIC WILL FLOAT THESE WILL FLOAT AND I JUST <SOT-14.07.49 TO 14.08.00 TRT :11> MOM INSTINCTS JUST KICKED IN AND I JUST KNEW THAT WAS WHAT I NEEDED TO GRAB TO PUT HIM IN FOR SAFETY BECAUSE HE OBVIOUSLY CAN'T SWIM, HE'S THREE MONTHS OLD." THEY ALL MADE IT. AND WENT BACK TO SEE WHAT WAS LEFT OF THEIR HOUSE THE NEXT DAY - THIS IS WHAT THEY SAW. A TOTAL LOSS. <SOT-CALLIE BROWN/ESCAPED HURRICANE IAN-14.10.04> "OUR COUCH WAS ON THE KITCHEN COUNTER THAT'S JUST WHERE IT HAD FLOATED. OUR DINING ROOM TABLE WAS IN THE LIVING ROOM." THEY CAN SPEND THE NEXT MONTH AT FAMILY MEMBER'S CONDO IN THE NEXT TOWN OVER..WHILE THEY REBUILD. THEY LIVED THROUGH IRMA IN 2016 - AND SAID THEY EVACUATED THEN FOR NO REASON - THIS TIME THEY IGNORED THE MANDATORY EVACUATION ORDER. <SOT-CALLIE BROWN/ESCAPED HURRICANE IAN-14.12.58> JIM: DO YOU WISH NOW THAT YOU HAD LEFT? A: YES. I WILL NEVER STAY AGAIN. I WILL ABSOLUTELY EVACUATE I DON'T CARE IF IT'S A CATEGORY 1 I'M NOT STAYING EVER AGAIN FOR A HURRICANE. I NEVER WANT TO EXPERIENCE THAT AGAIN. FRIENDS HAVE LAUNCH A FUND- RAISING PAGE FOR THE COUPLE- THEY'VE ALREADY RAISED MORE THEN 13-THOUSAND DOLLARS ..CALLIE ADMITS IT'S GOING TO TAKE A LONG TIME TO GET BACK ON THEIR FEET. LIVE IN THE STUDIO JIM KEITHLEY WMTW NEWS 8. OPENING STATEMENTS N
Mother tucks baby in plastic bin, recounts tale of survival during Hurricane Ian
Updated: 7:19 PM CDT Oct 3, 2022
A woman was forced to swim to safety with her three-month-old son tucked inside a plastic storage bin as Hurricane Ian swept into Fort Myers, Florida. Callie Brown captured cellphone video of their neighborhood being ravaged by the storm last Wednesday. When the hurricane hit, Brown, along with her partner, Chad Duckwall, and their 3-month-old son, Charlie, took refuge in the attic. But the water kept coming, Brown said.Brown said she dumped the Christmas decorations from a plastic storage tote and packed her son inside with his car seat and a blanket. Duckwall packed the family cat in another plastic storage bin, and they all floated away hoping to reach a neighbor's house, which was on higher ground."Terrifying. The most terrifying thing I've ever gone through my entire life," Brown said of the wet, wild journey. "I didn't know if we were going to make it to be totally honest. I remember looking at Chad and just saying, 'I don't want to die. I don't want to die,'" she said.The swim through the water, which was 10 feet deep, was harrowing, to say the least."We were in the eye wall of the hurricane at that time so there was 140, 150 mile per hour winds all around us, there was debris flying. Thankfully none of us were hit with any of it. He was such a little trooper he didn't even cry," Brown said. "Mom instincts just kicked in and I just knew (the plastic tote was) what I needed to grab to put him in for safety because he obviously can't swim, he's three months old."They all made it to safety. The family returned to their house the next day to assess the damage and see if there was anything they could salvage. Most everything was gone. "Our couch was on the kitchen counter that's just where it had floated. Our dining room table was in the living room," Brown said.They can spend the next month at a family member's condo in the next town over while they rebuild. They lived through Hurricane Irma in 2017 and said they evacuated then for no reason. This time they ignored the mandatory evacuation order but said they wish they hadn't."I will never stay again. I will absolutely evacuate I don't care if it's a category 1, I'm not staying ever again for a hurricane. I never want to experience that again," Brown said.Friends have launched a fundraising page for the couple. They've already raised more than $13,000. Brown admitted it's going to take a long time to get back on their feet.
A woman was forced to swim to safety with her three-month-old son tucked inside a plastic storage bin as Hurricane Ian swept into Fort Myers, Florida.
Callie Brown captured cellphone video of their neighborhood being ravaged by the storm last Wednesday.
When the hurricane hit, Brown, along with her partner, Chad Duckwall, and their 3-month-old son, Charlie, took refuge in the attic. But the water kept coming, Brown said.
Brown said she dumped the Christmas decorations from a plastic storage tote and packed her son inside with his car seat and a blanket. Duckwall packed the family cat in another plastic storage bin, and they all floated away hoping to reach a neighbor's house, which was on higher ground.
"Terrifying. The most terrifying thing I've ever gone through my entire life," Brown said of the wet, wild journey. "I didn't know if we were going to make it to be totally honest. I remember looking at Chad and just saying, 'I don't want to die. I don't want to die,'" she said.
The swim through the water, which was 10 feet deep, was harrowing, to say the least.
"We were in the eye wall of the hurricane at that time so there was 140, 150 mile per hour winds all around us, there was debris flying. Thankfully none of us were hit with any of it. He was such a little trooper he didn't even cry," Brown said. "Mom instincts just kicked in and I just knew (the plastic tote was) what I needed to grab to put him in for safety because he obviously can't swim, he's three months old."
They all made it to safety. The family returned to their house the next day to assess the damage and see if there was anything they could salvage. Most everything was gone.
"Our couch was on the kitchen counter that's just where it had floated. Our dining room table was in the living room," Brown said.
They can spend the next month at a family member's condo in the next town over while they rebuild.
They lived through Hurricane Irma in 2017 and said they evacuated then for no reason. This time they ignored the mandatory evacuation order but said they wish they hadn't.
"I will never stay again. I will absolutely evacuate I don't care if it's a category 1, I'm not staying ever again for a hurricane. I never want to experience that again," Brown said.
Friends have launched a fundraising page for the couple. They've already raised more than $13,000. Brown admitted it's going to take a long time to get back on their feet.