Florida's storm-struck Gulf Coast takes stock

Florida's storm-struck Gulf Coast takes stock

HORSESHOE BEACH, Florida--Tropical Storm Idalia drenched the Carolinas with heavy rain before departing the U.S. Eastern Seaboard on Thursday, while officials in Florida, where the tempest made landfall as a major hurricane a day earlier, stepped up recovery and damage-appraisal efforts.

Nearly 36 hours after plowing ashore from the Gulf of Mexico at Keaton Beach in Florida's Big Bend region, packing Category 3 winds of nearly 125 miles per hour (201 kph), Idalia weakened from a tropical storm to a post-tropical cyclone and drifted out into the Atlantic. At the height of its fury on Wednesday, Idalia ravaged a wide swath of low-lying and largely rural Gulf Coast landscape and forced emergency teams, some in boats, to rescue dozens of residents who became trapped by floodwaters. The storm brought fierce winds and drove surging seawater miles inland, strewing the area with fallen trees, power lines and debris. Many buildings were in shambles, and power outages were widespread. The storm ranked as the most powerful hurricane in more than a century to strike the Big Bend region, a sparsely populated area laced with marshland, rivers and springs where the state's northern Gulf Coast panhandle curves into the western side of the Florida Peninsula.

The damage and loss of life were less than many had feared, with authorities confirming three traffic-related fatalities linked to the storm in Florida and another in southeastern Georgia. Idalia's storm surge - considered the greatest hazard posed by major hurricanes - appeared to have caused no deaths. Even as Idalia headed out to the Atlantic, the back end of the storm system was producing downpours that were forecast to dump as much as 10 inches (25 cm) of rain in some spots along the coastline of North and South Carolina, the National Weather Service said. Forecasters had warned of possible life-threatening flash floods in the Carolinas. But local media reports at day's end said both states had mostly been spared. Flooding damaged about 40 businesses in the town of Whiteville, North Carolina, marking that state's most serious brush with Idalia, according to Raleigh-based ABC News affiliate WTVD-TV. South Carolina's emergency management center was winding down its operations by afternoon, said Charleston-based station WCSC-TV. “We were very fortunate this time,” state emergency management chief Kim Stenos was quoted as saying. Much of Florida's Big Bend coast was much less fortunate. Horseshoe Beach, a community about 30 miles south of landfall, was among those that bore the brunt of Idalia's impact.

Video footage showed scattered remnants of trailer homes sheared from bare concrete foundations. Other trailer homes had toppled and slid into lagoons, and boat docks were reduced to piles of splintered lumber. John "Sparky" Abrade, a 77-year-old retiree who lives in the community, said he nevertheless felt relieved when he saw the damage to his home, even though the windows were blown out and household items scattered about. "I'm feeling great. The house is still here," he said.

The Daily Herald

Copyright © 2020 All copyrights on articles and/or content of The Caribbean Herald N.V. dba The Daily Herald are reserved.


Without permission of The Daily Herald no copyrighted content may be used by anyone.

Comodo SSL
mastercard.png
visa.png

Hosted by

SiteGround
© 2024 The Daily Herald. All Rights Reserved.