Sunday, September 29, 2024

Hurricane Helene Update : Sept. 29

No one has power, so the only way to go online to get internet or contact loved ones was to park at Ingles. It must have had a mobile Hotspot parked near or something. The store itself didn't have power.
Another reason why I-40 into Tennessee would still be closed in January.
While online in the parking lot, I was finally able to see the radar of Hurricane Helene spiraling over our area. 

... and I learned to operate our generator.

The Short Story of Hurricane Helene :


On the night of September 26 , 2024 Hurricane Helene hit North Carolina as a true representation of global warming and climate change. Asheville, Lake Lure & Chimney Rock were completely destroyed while all surrounding areas, including ours, were ravaged, and Helene would fight with Katrina as as deadliest Hurricane in modern US history with 238 officially dead, and probably many more deceased homeless. Water is the true killer of any hurricane, and we had both wind AND water. Our diciduous trees were not designed for this wind, and many of them came down, ruining countless homes. The biggest problem was the water reservoir and watershed located just north of Asheville. We had many days of rain, pre-storm. This had already filled the reservoir. Helene made it overflow and the resulting flood flowed into the valleys destroying everything in its path. This flood converged in Chimney Rock destroying the entire town and ended at Lake Lure which became a literal graveyard of homes, debris, ... and bodies. We would spend 1 week without power and 2.5 weeks without phone and internet. Our entire yard would be littered with fallen trees, our driveway blocked (our chainsaw owning neighbors would free us), and our outbuilding (a hopeful stables for my future goats) was destroyed, but our home was untouched!

No comments: