PAWLEYS ISLAND, S.C. — From dark and stormy to clear and breezy, the coastline that a million or so of us evacuated two weeks ago now looks like any other perfect day at the beach.
The only signs of there having been any weather at all are a few scattered piles of pine straw in the street. Yet doom is rising all around us with rivers close to peaking and expected to soon overflow.
This storm, Florence, just can’t seem to quit.
I left my coastal hut Sept. 11 as I headed west toward our inland home. At the time, Florence was a Category 4 hurricane headed straight for us, at least in one or two projection models. Florence, which dilly-dallied like some red-bonneted child going to Grandma’s house, had weakened to a Category 1 by landfall near Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina.
Even so, a hurricane is a hurricane and, as we’ve seen, can still be lethal. Even inland communities aren’t immune from such a storm, especially one the width and breadth of Florence. At our inland home, which lies about 155 miles southwest from Wrightsville Beach, it was all hands – and hammers – on deck.
We covered windows with plywood and piled sandbags at basement entrances. We stocked two slow cookers with roasts and stews – enough food to feed our sons and other family from Charleston. Tubs were filled with water, the generator got a test run, and invitations went out to friends and strangers who might need a place to stay for a while.
If this sounds like much ado, please recall Hurricane Hugo, which, like Florence, headed inland and wreaked havoc in cities such as Columbia, South Carolina, and Charlotte, North Carolina. And even as far as the Blue Ridge Mountains. Our property lost at least 100 trees during Hugo. We were ready.
We waited. And waited. Days went by as Florence hovered just off the coast.
Day after day brought sweltering heat and humidity that felt like wearing a damp, nylon bodysuit. Every so often, a branch would stir. More waiting.
It is a peculiar feature of human nature and experience to become fully mobilized and impressively efficient in preparation for a disaster and then, when it spares you, to feel vaguely disappointed. We had a few wind gusts and sporadic showers; trees shed their brittle twigs and dead branches. But, nothing biblical came our way, visiting death and destruction elsewhere, instead. The death toll in the Carolinas and Virginia came to 43, thus far.
No one came to stay. The crowd we’d expected from Charleston decided to stay put since the storm was heading straight for us in Camden. We sent vats of food out to other households.
We are, of course, deeply grateful.
And, now, back at the beach, we wait again, this time for record-breaking flooding that is expected to start Tuesday and continue for days. The most vulnerable areas are Horry and Georgetown counties. I live in the latter but am between the ocean and the rivers, relatively safe from both disaster zones.
The city of Georgetown, recently identified by USA Today as the nation’s best coastal small town, is a 15-minute drive south from here. Five South Carolina rivers flow through there into the Atlantic Ocean, and waters are expected to rise substantially as trillions of gallons of dumped water flow back to the sea. Last Friday, city officials were handing out 15,000 sandbags, while local residents went scavenging for more. A white truck circled my block that morning and pulled in next door to me. The driver, noting my quizzical look as I was walking Ollie the blind poodle, explained that he lived by the Waccamaw River and had been urged to grab the 30 or so leftover sandbags stacked outside my neighbor’s garage.
It was the neighborly thing to do. Though neighborliness always runs high in the South and especially in coastal communities, good will has been cresting lately as strangers chatted about Florence in checkout lines. Among the many heart-warming stories from the past couple of weeks has been the work of volunteers and animal shelters to relocate dogs and cats from hazardous areas to safer ones.
As for my own little hut and the belongings I worriedly left behind, all were intact upon my return here a week ago. It took two days to restore order from the mess I created in an overabundance of caution. But, then, one never knows.
Kathleen Parker is a columnist for The Washington Post. She can be contacted at:
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