Florida’s Panhandle took stock yesterday of the hammering destruction wrought by Hurricane Michael, with homes obliterated or reduced to rubble and power lines and trees ripped up by the third most powerful storm ever to strike the US mainland.
Michael, now weakened to a tropical storm as it doused Georgia and the Carolinas with drenching rain, crashed ashore on Wednesday near the small town of Mexico Beach carrying winds of up to 155mph (250kph) and causing deep seawater flooding.
The storm killed two people.
In Mexico Beach, CNN aerial footage showed homes closest to the beach had lost all but their foundations.
A few blocks inland, about half the homes were reduced to piles of wood and siding and those still standing suffered heavy damage.
Brock Long, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), called the town, which has a population of about 1,200, “ground zero” for the hurricane damage.
One objective is to help people who could be trapped in various areas along the coast, he told a news conference.
This part of northwest Florida is known for its small beach towns and wildlife reserves.
In Panama City, 20 miles (32km) northwest of Mexico Beach, buildings were crushed and boats were scattered around.
Michael left a trail of utility wires on roads, flattened tall pine trees and knocked a steeple from a church.
Al Hancock, 45, who works on a tour boat, survived in Panama City with his wife and dog.
“The roof fell in but we lived through it,” he said.
Connie Teplicek is standing among downed power lines, fallen trees, shattered glass, split-open houses and wrecked cars.
“We never had anything like this,” she says. “I’ve lived here my whole life. This is just unbelievable.”
Teplicek and her husband Jeff stayed when Michael came roaring through their rural suburb north of Panama City.
Yesterday, as the sun came up on their Cedar Creek community, other residents step out to look at the devastation meted out on their homes.
The power has been out for two days, and it could be weeks before it is finally restored.
Most of the cellphone networks are offline in the area.
A gas main burst down the road, and there are fears the water supply has been contaminated.
“We rode the storm out inside our house,” Teplicek says. “I’ll tell you what – we’ll never do that again.”
The change in air pressure during the storm caused their soap dispensers to start pumping on their own, she says, and it sealed several doors shut.
“We just hunkered down inside the closet and prayed to God,” Jeff Teplicek says. “We thought the whole house was going to be ripped apart.”
Their daughter is pregnant and in her final trimester, living just a short drive up the road, but they have not been able to get in touch with her.
A Mexico Beach resident who rode out the hurricane described the impact of the storm surge to CNN.
“When the water came in houses started floating,” said the man identified as Scott.
“We had furniture in our house that wasn’t even our furniture. The surge had brought stuff in. There’s nothing left here anymore,” he said of the town. “Our lives are gone here. All the stores, all the restaurants, everything.”
“It’s hard to grasp,” he said. “This was never in our imagination.”
Florida Governor Rick Scott told the Weather Channel that the damage from Panama City down to Mexico Beach was “way worse than anybody ever anticipated”.
John Billiot, president of America’s Cajun Navy, a group of volunteers who bring boats and vehicles to help during disasters, said that Michael was unprecedented.
“We’ve been doing this since 2005,” he told CNN while working on rescues around Panama City. “I have never been scared of a storm a day in my life. This one right here put the fear of God into me. It gives me goosebumps talking about it.”
The two people killed in the storm were a man who died when a tree toppled onto his house in Florida and a girl who died when debris fell into a home in Georgia, officials and local media said.
FEMA head Long said that several hospitals in the Panhandle were hit by the hurricane and patients had to be evacuated.
More than 830,000 homes and businesses were without power in Florida, Alabama and Georgia early yesterday.
Michael was a Category 4 storm on the five-step Saffir-Simpson hurricane intensity scale, just shy of a rare Category 5, when it came ashore.
It weakened steadily as it traveled inland and was downgraded overnight to a tropical storm.
By 11am EDT (1200 GMT), Michael had 50mph (85kph) winds and had pushed rapidly northeast to within 35 miles (60km) of Charlotte, North Carolina, the National Hurricane Centre (NHC) said.
Parts of North Carolina and Virginia could get as much as 9” (23cm) of rain and life-threatening flash floods, the NHC said.
The Carolinas are still recovering from Hurricane Florence last month.
South Carolina authorities have set up 11 emergency shelters in anticipation of floods and tornadoes from Michael.
The hurricane, the fiercest to hit Florida in 80 years, pummeled communities across the Panhandle and turned streets into roof-high waterways.
Thousands of people hunkered down in shelters overnight after fleeing their homes ahead of the storm.
An estimated 6,000 people evacuated to emergency shelters, mostly in Florida, and that number was expected to swell to 20,000 across five states by week’s end, said Brad Kieserman of the American Red Cross.
Twenty miles (32km) south of Mexico Beach, floodwaters were more than 7’ (2.1m) deep near Apalachicola, a town of about 2,300 residents, hurricane center chief Ken Graham said.
Wind damage was also evident.
“There are so many downed power lines and trees that it’s almost impossible to get through the city,” Apalachicola Mayor Van Johnson said.
Michael had rapidly strengthened as it churned north over the Gulf of Mexico in recent days, growing from a tropical storm into a Category 4 hurricane in about 40 hours and catching many by surprise.
With a low barometric pressure recorded at 919 millibars, the measure of a hurricane’s force, it ranked as the third strongest storm on record to make landfall in the continental United States.
Only Hurricane Camille on the Mississippi Gulf Coast in 1969 and the so-called Labour Day hurricane of 1935 in the Florida Keys were more intense.
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