Hurricane Helene / Invest 97L

46 fatalities (2 were counted twice accidentally) from Hurricane Helene so far. I expect the count to be in the hundreds.
The effects in Appalachia are definitely going to run up her kill count. And also the retard Florida Men who decided to have beach party on the Big Bend coast. May be weeks before we find out about them though. They need time to wash back ashore.
 
I cannot understate this is probably the worst storm I've ever seen in this area. Just now was able to drive where I can get signal, multiple trees still in the road, power lines down, road washed away, evacuations, over a week ETA for power restoration. This wasn't even a direct hit from the hurricane. I was trapped by water on my street until now. Can't get in contact with my sibling. Holy fuck fellas. There's so much destruction I wish I could powerlevel with some photos.
 
I cannot understate this is probably the worst storm I've ever seen in this area. Just now was able to drive where I can get signal, multiple trees still in the road, power lines down, road washed away, evacuations, over a week ETA for power restoration. This wasn't even a direct hit from the hurricane. I was trapped by water on my street until now. Can't get in contact with my sibling. Holy fuck fellas. There's so much destruction I wish I could powerlevel with some photos.
I know I am an eternal doomer, but even this one spooked me looking at it. My worry is people were so used to these storms being nothing burgers that they didn't take the strident warnings seriously. Especially when it came to people on the Panhandle Shore and in Appalachia. We knew two days ago that not only would Florida get Rocked, but the Carolina Mountains too due to how fucking fast this bitch was moving. She was an unusual storm all around.
 
I have family in NC, schools across the state are shut down. Millions are without power, Gov Cooper warning that all roads should be considered closed due to the insane flash flooding throughout. It’s a shit show, the interior of the state rarely hit by hurricane remnants from the coast.
It wasn't a remnant either. It was a strong Tropical Storm just short of a Category 1 hurricane when it plowed into the Western Carolinas. That is what is so Amazing about her. She didn't become a Sub tropical remnant until she entered Tennessee and Ohio. That is fucking unreal.
 
Heartbreaking seeing that hospital, they said 50 people were on the roof...I bet there's people that were in bad shape in there that couldn't make it to the top...
The Patients were probably evacuated to Hospitals in Charlottesville and Richmond most likely. They should be okay. Virginia oddly enough for an east coast State has a ton of really remote and sparsely populated counties. So it has a robust Air Ambulance service that comes out of the tax fund to pay for. So odds are if there is a bill for the rescue and transport, its going to be credited to the Tennessee State Government.

Hopefully the Staff had the presence of mind to get everyone up. I imagine people who require ICU support would not be at a remote regional hospital in the first place.
 
I cannot understate this is probably the worst storm I've ever seen in this area. Just now was able to drive where I can get signal, multiple trees still in the road, power lines down, road washed away, evacuations, over a week ETA for power restoration. This wasn't even a direct hit from the hurricane. I was trapped by water on my street until now. Can't get in contact with my sibling. Holy fuck fellas. There's so much destruction I wish I could powerlevel with some photos.
A few years back we had an event that made us lose power in the area for almost two weeks. It fucking sucks, stay strong my dude.

At least you now have an excuse to eat as much spaghettios straight from the can as you want.
 
I'm just sitting here admiring this storms beauty. She is so terribly perfect.
Yeah, hurricanes are really awe-inspiring at times. I always a feel of twinge of guilt about saying that because obviously they bring death and destruction, but OTOH nature is wild. For all the pain it caused, Katrina was a beautiful bitch too:
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Anyway, I’m surprised most of the deaths have been in the Georgia/Carolina area (so far), but it’s possible a lot of them just didn’t get the memo. Everyone tends to think only the areas around landfall are going to be the worst hit, and well, that’s just not the case.
 
Major Disaster in North Carolina. the 18 inches of Rain predication was optimistic.

Recorded rainfall is 32 Inches. Helene entered the Appalachian Mountains as a tropical cyclone with sufficient power to maintain her name.

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Life may not soon be the same for some communities in North Carolina's mountains after Tropical Storm Helene.
Heartbreak in the hills: The French Broad and Swannanoa rivers swept through Asheville near Biltmore Village. King Street in Boone, a postcard-perfect college town, turned into a rushing river.

  • And in perhaps the most alarming alert in some time in this state, the National Weather Service issued an all-caps warning just after 11am to say that a Lake Lure dam failure is "IMMINENT" and that anybody downriver from it should move to higher ground immediately.
Why it matters: We won't know for days the extent of the damage.

State of play: A never-before-seen expansive set of extensive and life-threatening flash flood emergencies went into effect for Asheville and surrounding areas.

  • The NC Department of Transportation at 11:15am issued a staggering warning to say "All roads in Western NC should be considered closed. Do not travel unless an emergency or seeking higher ground."
  • North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper warned of landslides, and called the storm the worst in modern history for parts of western North Carolina.
  • A portion of 1-40 along the North Carolina-Tennessee border was closed, according to WBIR in Knoxville.
  • More than a foot of rain had fallen across much of the region as of Friday afternoon. Part of Yancey County, located in the Blue Ridge Mountains, has seen 29.5 inches of rain so far, per the governor's office.

Anyway, I’m surprised most of the deaths have been in the Georgia/Carolina area (so far), but it’s possible a lot of them just didn’t get the memo. Everyone tends to think only the areas around landfall are going to be the worst hit, and well, that’s just not the case.
They were not ready. When has the Western North Carolina Mountains had to prepare for landfall of a Category 1 Hurricane? This one didn't even come from the NC Coast. It came up from Florida.
 
They were not ready. When has the Western North Carolina Mountains had to prepare for landfall of a Category 1 Hurricane? This one didn't even come from the NC Coast. It came up from Florida
It’s so difficult to explain to people not from the area why NC has been hit so hard. There’s no precedent for this amount of rain in the area in modern times. The roads are gonna be washed out, I don’t even wanna think about how many deaths are going to be reported from places like Asheville (lots of homeless) and Boone (college town) just from unpreparedness or an inability to leave.

There’s likely shelters, but the speed at which everything hit nobody was ready. I have friends who I haven’t heard from since last night the area, they heard the warnings but didn’t understand how bad the flooding would be. Charlotte had at least some experience, but god, there’s gonna be some godawful stories from the NC/TN.
 
Yeah, hurricanes are really awe-inspiring at times. I always a feel of twinge of guilt about saying that because obviously they bring death and destruction, but OTOH nature is wild. For all the pain it caused, Katrina was a beautiful bitch too:
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Anyway, I’m surprised most of the deaths have been in the Georgia/Carolina area (so far), but it’s possible a lot of them just didn’t get the memo. Everyone tends to think only the areas around landfall are going to be the worst hit, and well, that’s just not the case.
I had the same kind of thoughts today. It was one of those eerily beautiful days that you get just outside the domain of a major cyclone. It's a spooky contrast to consider, especially with the knowledge that "just up the road" isn't merely awful weather - it's total bedlam. There was a time when I would have been way more confident about the economic and industrial capacity to repair the kind of core infrastructure damage that we're seeing, but lately I have serious doubts. I'm really hoping Helene won't lead to a shitload of population displacement and small town death, but I know it's foolish hope.

All the outward indicators are there for this to be a storm with some serious and far-reaching consequences, but I'm not comfortable putting an academic lens on this just yet. There's too much death going on.
 
Anyway, I’m surprised most of the deaths have been in the Georgia/Carolina area (so far), but it’s possible a lot of them just didn’t get the memo. Everyone tends to think only the areas around landfall are going to be the worst hit, and well, that’s just not the case.
This is going to be a couple of weeks tallying things up. The main landfall area still has no power, and the search and rescue is going to take at least a couple weeks. There will be people who are found later because the area was too dangerous or needed to be cleared of road hazards before anyone could get to them. There will be people found in their homes both alive and dead, and there will be bodies eventually washing up and missing people marked as found alive or dead, with some never being found.

The rest of Florida has power, and most counties didn't lose complete power so they could report back. Not the affected area. There's going to be people stuck in one place and a slow but dedicated force trying to get them rescued. Not only is their power out, their internet and phone services are out, so people can't call to say that they're ok or someone around them has passed.
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They'll have to wait until they can leave or be rescued. You'll hear a death toll for Florida climb over the week. Some of the reported deaths are from things like accidents happening before Helene or during the calmer part of the hurricane, those are the ones you'll hear first.

It’s so difficult to explain to people not from the area why NC has been hit so hard.
I'm guessing it was like if an ant colony was drenched in 10 gallons of water in 5 minutes. The ants know rain, but they don't know how much or how bad. They can run for shelter, but many are stuck.


All the outward indicators are there for this to be a storm with some serious and far-reaching consequences, but I'm not comfortable putting an academic lens on this just yet. There's too much death going on.
We can be humans just staring in awe at forces more poweful than us and mourning the damage and loss right now.
 
9:00 PM alert.

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All Counties along the Appalachian Ridge from South Carolina to Maryland under Flood Warning. Western North Carolina Counties under observed Flood Warning. Alerts extend to September 30th for the City of Columbus, Ohio. Downstream counties can expect flash flooding from the 28th to the 29th and are to prepare to evacuate immediately if domiciled in a flood zone along any creek or river west of the Virginia Piedmont, and at the Falls of the James River.

Interstate 40 is closed in all directions at Mile Marker 432

Interstate 26 is closed in all directions at Mile Marker 27

There are no passable roads in western North Carolina. Non-emergency travel is prohibited.


 
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