Flooding and high water continue being a serious problem as former Hurricane Helene dumps massive amounts of rain.
Fast moving Helene made landfall about 10 miles west-southwest of Perry, Florida, at 11:10 pm last evening. Helene came ashore as a Cat-4 storm with over 120 mph sustained winds. Seven fatalities have been reported. Following the storm surge, impacts are now being felt across the Southeast and into portions of the mid-Atlantic as the storm pushes farther inland and weakens.
The greatest ongoing threat from Helene’s activity continues to be flash flooding as torrential rain falls throughout the southeast, impacting rivers and pushing streams onto roads and into communities, sometimes trapping residents.
According to Fox News Weather, “The flash flood threat stretches from the Southeast into the mid-Atlantic, where multiple Flash Flood Emergencies were issued early Friday morning, including the first-ever Flash Flood Emergency issued for Atlanta.
At least seven other Flash Flood Emergencies were also issued in western North Carolina from Asheville to the Charlotte area.
According to a post on X from Haywood County Emergency Services, residents in portions of Waynesville, North Carolina, are being told to evacuate because of the potentially deadly situation that’s unfolding. (more)
Treepers in the affected areas, please use this thread to update your personal condition. Also, all long time Treepers understand you can reach out via email if you need assistance, and we will do our earnest best to assist and/or connect you with resources.
1,500 search and rescue responders are active right now just in Florida. If you are in an impact zone, do not go looking around, be careful. There is a great video below, a press conference from moments ago, that contains excellent information for those in the impact zone. Please watch it.
Due to the speed of the storm, there are convoys coming to construct a pre-planned electricity grid recovery process.
Convoys from every city, town and state from the east-coast to the mid-west. A glorious melding of dirty fingernails all arriving for the meet-up. Depending on your proximity to the bigger picture objectives at hand, you will cherish their arrival.
But first, there will be an assessment. The convoys will stage at pre-determined locations using radios for communication. Most cell phone services will likely be knocked out.
Recovery teams will begin a street-by-street review; everything needs to be evaluated prior to thinking about beginning to rebuild a grid. Your patience within this process is needed; heck, it ain’t like you’ve got a choice in the matter…. so just stay positive.
Meanwhile, you might walk outside and find yourself a stranger in your neighborhood. It will all be cattywampus.
Trees gone, signs gone, crap everywhere, if you don’t need to travel, DON’T.
I mean CRAP e.v.e.r.y.w.h.e.r.e.
Stay away from powerlines.
Try to stay within your immediate neighborhood for the first 36-48 hours. Keep the roadways and main arteries clear for recovery workers, power companies and fuel trucks.
Be entirely prepared to be lost in your own neighborhood and town for days, weeks, and even months. Unknown to you – your subconscious mind is like a human GPS mapping system. When that raging Helene takes away the subconscious landmarks, I guarantee you – you are gonna get lost, make wrong turns, miss the exit etc.
It’s kinda funny and weird at the same time.
Your brain is wired to turn left at the big oak next to the Church, and the road to your house is likely two streets past the 7-11 or Circle-k. You don’t even notice that’s how you travel around town; that’s just your brain working – it is what it is.
Well, now the big oak is gone; so too is the Circle-K and 7-11 signs. Like I said, everything is cattywampus. Your brain-memory will need to reboot and rewire. In the interim, you’re going to get lost… don’t get frustrated.
No street signs. Likely no stop signs. No traffic lights.
Remember, when it is safe to drive, every single intersection must be treated like a four-way stop…. and YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE TO PAY ATTENTION. Even the major intersections.
You’ll need to override your brain tendency to use memory in transit. You’ll need to pay close attention and watch for those who are not paying close attention. Travel sparingly, it’s just safer.
Check on your-self first, then your neighbors. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never said a word to the guy in the blue house before. It isn’t normalville now.
Break out of your box and check on the blue house down the street too. In the aftermath, there’s no class structure. Without power, the big fancy house on the corner with a pool is just a bigger mess. Everyone is equally a mess.
The first responders in your neighborhood are YOU.
You, the wife, your family, Mrs. Wilson next door; Joe down the street; Bob’s twin boys and the gal with the red car are all in this together. If you don’t ordinarily cotton to toxic masculinity, you will worship it in the aftermath of a hurricane. Git-r-done lives there.
Don’t stand around griping with a 40′ tree blocking the main road to your neighborhood. Figure out who’s got chainsaws, who knows how to correctly use them, and set about safely clearing the road. If every neighborhood starts clearing their own roadways, the recovery crews can then move in for the details.
Stage one focuses on major arteries… then secondary… then neighborhood etc. It’s a process. Oh, and don’t get mad if your fancy mailbox is ploughed over by a focused front-end loader who is on a priority mission to clear a path. Just deal with it. Those same front-end loaders will also be removing feet of sand from coastal roads. Don’t go sightseeing… stay in your neighborhood.
For the first 36-48 hours, please try to stay close to home, in your neighborhood. Another reason to stay close to home is the sketchy people who can sometimes surface, looters etc. Staying close to home and having contact with your neighbors is just reasonable and safer.
Phase-1 recovery is necessarily, well, scruffy…. we’re just moving and managing the mess; not trying to clean it up yet. It’ll be ok. There are going to be roofing nails everywhere, and you will likely get multiple flat tires in the weeks after the hurricane.
After this storm half of the people living near the Big Bend are going to fit into two categories, two types of people: (1) those with a new roof; or (2) those with a blue roof (tarp).
Keep a joyous heart filled with thankfulness; and if you can’t muster it, then just pretend. Don’t be a jerk. You will be surrounded by jerks…. elevate yourself. If you need to do a few minutes of cussing, take a walk. Keep your wits about you and stay calm.
Now, when the recovery teams arrive…. If you are on the road and there’s a convoy of utility trucks on the road, pull over. Treat power trucks and tanker trucks like ambulances and emergency vehicles. Pull over, give them a clear road and let them pass.
When everyone gets to work, if you see a lineman, pole-digger or crew say thanks. Just simple “thanks”. Wave at them and give them a thumb-up. No need to get unnecessarily familiar, a simple: “thank you for your help” will suffice. You know, ordinary people skills.
Many of these smaller crews will be sleeping in cots, or in their trucks while they are working never-ending shifts. Some will be staging at evacuation shelters, likely schools and such. The need to shelter people and recovery crews might also delay the re-opening of schools.
Once you eventually start getting power back, if you see a crew in a restaurant, same thing applies… “thanks guys”.
Same goes for the tanker truckers. The convenience stores with gas pumps are part of the priority network. Those will get power before other locales without power. Fuel outlets are a priority. Fuel is the lifeblood of recovery. Hospitals, first responders, emergency facilities, fuel outlets, then comes commercial and residential.
Remember, this is important – YOU are the first responder for your neighborhood. Don’t quit. Recovery is a process. Depending on the scale of the impact zone, the process can take days, weeks and even months.
Take care of your family first; then friends and neighborhood, and generally make a conscious decision to be a part of any needed solution.
Pray together and be strong together. It might sound goofy to some, but don’t be bashful about being openly thankful in prayer.
It will be ok.
It might be a massive pain in the a**, but in the end, it’ll be ok.
Governor Ron DeSantis has some great information and advice in this press conference this morning.

✝️❤️ you, Sundance 😎
Thanks! I passed it on.
“This doesn’t belong in this article” – totally
So why isn’t it in the presidential or open thread?
This is never okay
And you probably call people out for their spelling. Watch the video. Realize this is verified Intel. then realize this can only happen with assistance from US law enforcements – high levels.
I specifically chose this article because more people would see the warning.
You must be new here, maybe you should read the guidelines before posting.
Derailing a thread is never ok. And no, I didn’t watch it
Really? Kill the messenger and ignore the message. On second thought…read this: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/sycophant
2.) PLEASE STAY ON TOPIC – do not post something unrelated to the specific matter and content of the thread subject. There is ALWAYS a daily open thread available for any subject you feel should get attention. Never place unrelated, “O/T”, or “Off Topic” comments on a thread unrelated to the topic. It is not ok to say: “sorry, O/T but”… or any iteration therein, it is quite rude.
https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2024/08/02/guidelines-for-comments-8/
The Treehouse operates on the ‘old school’ standards and practices of civil discourse amid the original blogging community, long before social media took over.
You must have missed it, It’s been discussed in the presidential thread for a couple days. Repost it there.
This thread if hurricane survivors!
Thanks
-passed it on
Another United Flight 800 that over 22.000+ seen objects going from sea level to the plane but the Clowns In Action told us it was fuel burning from the ground up.
Funny how wires never ever short circuited in fuel tanks before or ever since
W…T….EVER LOVING F ?!?!
Title of the video linked on Rumble is: = “9 Surface-To-Air Missiles Have Reportedly Been Smuggled Into U.S. To Target Trump’s Plane.”
28 mins. of something you Can’t verify… doesn’t fit with this topic.
We live in a small retirement community 20 miles north of Tampa. Everything is fine here. We got some wind and rain last evening. The storm moved on quickly which helped us a lot.
I am about 70 miles north east of you, give or take, and we had light rain with some strong gusts as well. Praise Jesus, our lights only flickered twice. Aside from some downed cabbage palm fronds, oak leaves, Spanish moss and a loblolly pine that almost fell on my well pump, we emerged unscathed.
Prayers for the families suffering further up the Nature Coast. And may the Creator Bless all the First Responders and Linesmen.
I am going to check on my elderly neighbors right now.
here in the virginia blue ridge, we are getting some awful squall lines, rain so hard it looks like dirt, I grew up in south fla and I know the dirty side of hurricanes,,,,,,but the waffle house down the street is still open!
Waffle House is the best!! They truly do serve their communities–rain or shine!!
One must be careful which Waffle House is being patronized in proximity to “gentleman’s” clubs and music venues come closing time.. other than that, WH is an an outstanding establishment, wholly worth your hard earned dollars!
cherp, I just became aware of the ‘Waffle House’ index for storm severity (from the recent passing of the WH CEO).
Yes, hurricanes are serious business, yet applying the Waffle House index can provide perspective to the ‘everyday man’.
Been living by it since 1970
Jacksonville Beaches area:
Gale force winds through most of the night. Lots of limbs and tree debris. Nowhere near as bad as Irma or Michael though.
However, trees snapped and took out main power lines in several areas. Atlantic Beach proper completely out of power.
JEA crews claim there will be power in less than 5 hours. Sporadic outages on both sides of intercoastal.
Not near as bad as those guys on the Big Bend and Panhandle. Prayers to those folks. 🙏
If we had had Helene’s wind and rain for the 18 hours that Debby brought to us rather than the 3, likely most of the area would have been devastatingly flooded and roofs and even walls blown off houses. The Good Lord watched over us and cared for us.
Yes, speed helped alot.
GOOD MORNING!
It was quite a night as the storm, the 3rd hurricane in 2 years, passed right over the Advent Christian Village in Suwannee County.
No damage to my house and our daughter’s home in Tallahassee, or their Dad’s house at the Village.
Wind gusts got up to 99 mph at one point according to this link – https://www.weather.gov/wrh/timeseries?site=2205W&hours=72
We don’t have power right now, but cell phones and internet are working.
It doesn’t look as bad as last year’s hurricane Idalia, but the trees have been ‘pruned’ twice. A large grove of longleaf pines near the nursing home was hit the worst. About 10-12 mature longleaf pines were broken off and brought down by the wind.
No roof damage to the main buildings and church – but they all got new roofs this year after Idalia.
No lives lost and they served a hot breakfast this morning…though it was mostly gone when I finally got to the cafeteria, having taken Sally’s Dad to check on his house and get his golf cart.
Thank you for prayers, advice and counsel. It surely helped!
The need to shelter people and recovery crews might also delay the re-opening of schools.
CoVid proved that opening schools is nowhere nearly as critical as most of us used to think. Restoring power, communications and, in some extreme cases, water is far more critical. My family spent a week during and following a hurricane’s “visit” without power, water or communication. You don’t really appreciate your water supply until you don’t have it. Fortunately a full bath tub allowed for the flushing of toilets. After a couple of days, you realize that flushing is not only important but critical!!!!!
If your structure is sound and you only lost power, you are very fortunate.
You can get by without power…
No water leads to more bad things …
All of the West Coast of FL had storm surge to some degree.
Trust God. Fear not
I live in Seattle but work for a company in Panama City Beach. They all report that they are safe!
Thank God!
All good in Macon, GA.
Unfortunately….we’re 1000 miles away on vacation…..thanks to our neighbours we know our house is fine. GA Power restored power too
South Carolina here… took a whooping from wind and rain (looks like a mini tornado took up residence on my back porch and veggie garden… everything everywhere – wasn’t expecting it). I slept for 3 hrs got woken up by tornado warning (and we were in the path!), lost power and just lay there… Heard something hitting side of house and windows… eeek! Got up and checked outside but couldn’t see anything – too dark. But I could see a gazebo in my veggie garden slammed up against the house… went back to bed. Didn’t sleep.
Luckily, hubby and I just purchased a solar generator which arrived 2 days ago! It was absolute heaven to be able to just plug in the coffee pot, router and TV & fridge. Power came back on just a little bit ago.
Huge live oak shed some massive limbs, but nothing in its way so no casualties. Grill gazebo is toast as is the roof on my swing couch thingy.
6 1/2 inches of rain.
All in all, we fared very well. Thank the Lord!
I was so shocked at the massive size of Helene! Crazy!
Hope all Treepers in Florida are doing okay!
P.S. I highly recommend a solar generator – no noise, can be in the house AND it is clean power so won’t fry electronics. You can plug a heck of a lot of stuff into it too. We got ours from 4Patriots.com but Ecoflow is another good brand.
Lakeland, Polk County, Florida.
All safe.
Minor limbs down, will need to check some roof shingles. Out this morning seeing what neighbors need. So far, so good.
Once again, thank you Sundance for an invaluable resource. As a Florida native, I’ve experienced hurricans for over seven decades. Each time I read your information, doggone if I don’t learn something else! So much for that old dog thing.
Prayers for all.
Henderson County NC got whacked pretty good. I’m ok in western GA. We have a place NE of Tifton, GA. The town lost trees and power.
Family in east ga east of atlanta lost power. Seems the storm went between us. I got the wind from the north after lost strength I guess, they got fresh wind from the south.
One sister in Caldwell County,NC.
Just spoke with her…she is without
power and a lot of downed trees.
Family near Sebastian Fl ..East coast -they are
all doing fine. Just bad thunderstorms and
some rain.
Other family in Bradenton Fl ..West Coast …
it’s pretty flooded there.
But everyone is safe. That is
the most important thing.
Me—I stayed silent about my weather
when talking to them.🤐🤐🤐
99 degrees predicted for today.
10% humidity.
Clear skies and sizzling 🌞 sun.
I’m in Jacksonville. My neighborhood has no power or cell service. JEA, our utility company has been driving through the neighborhood so hopefully we will be back up and running again soon. We have trees down but no flooding. I consider us blessed and very fortunate and my prayers go out to others who were had much worse.
Great message Sundance, and well thought out!!
Hundreds of miles away, near the Tennessee state line in northwest Georgia, we received six inches of rain overnight – which is usually unheard-of. But we were a few miles west of the main thrust of the storm. Which apparently dumped several inches more rain in the same period. (But, “in generally mountainous country.” It will run off.)
Never lost power here. No thunderstorms. Just “a thoroughly drenching rain shower.”
A “very sudden change” to the extreme drought that we experienced here, all summer long. Hey, I’ll take it …
P.S.: One thing that we learned many years ago – since we live on land with some very-old and therefore very-massive pine, oak, and sycamore trees – is to keep on good terms with a local “tree guy.” At one time, he removed a limb that was overhanging our house. His scales told us that this one limb weighed nine hundred pounds. Had this limb ever had the chance to fall upon the building, it would have been devastating.
Middle Georgia, rural, Irma took off 1/2 of roof a few years ago.
Removed massive healthy 126 year old pecan tree 3 years ago. Its branches could take out house on one side, conservatory & shed & car across the meadow on the other. Have cried more than a normal person about this removal. Today, no tears.
Winds less than expected, arrived about 8am, nite was calm. Small branches down galore, a few long large limbs, nothing this ‘elderly’ woman can’t put in burn pile next few days.
Sadly, already lost a first responder in Atlanta today, and others. Godspeed.
Have been in regular contact with friends that are in upstate SC providing info (they lost power) and spiritual support. They were on the west side of the eye, that appeared to pass over the northwestern corner of SC based on radar. Lots of tree limbs in the yard and flash flood warnings – no power – but thankfully no structural damage or trees through roofs. All in all relatively minor in comparison to our fellow citizens in the Florida bend who remain in the prayers of all I know.
May God Bless all affected by Hurricane Helene
I’m going to post this here, with a disclaimer that what I know about Doppler radar and weather is next to nothing, so I don’t know what I am looking at in the video in this article.
I’m also posting this, in the hopes that one of you who reads this does understand weather and Doppler radar and can weigh in with true wisdom.
In the meantime, I believe our government elites hate us and are trying to kill us, so I think weather manipulation is very probabable. I believe that many fires in Hawaii, and here in the West are sketchy too and have possible government involvement.
The advent of PDJT on the scene has made me a believer in conspiracy theories. Today, I believe our government is capable of many heinous activities…
So here goes –
https://www.theburningplatform.com/2024/09/27/hard-scientific-proof-confirming-hurricane-helene-was-both-geo-engineered-weaponized/
You are correct
Whereas, “I politely decline to agree.” I do not believe that “humanity” is capable of any such thing. Some things are the sole purview of: God Himself. And “weather” is one of them.
I frankly believe that “we actually know far less about ‘this Wonderful Planet'” than we think we do. God reserves many mysteries for Himself. We “look through a glass, darkly.”
The very first parents for weather control start back in the later gave of the nineteenth century
Spell Check doesn’t like the word Patent, as in 1880s patents
…..sigh
For some, like plenty of scientists, science replaced G_d. The hidden technologies include weather manipulation capacities. Likely the chemtrail deposits aid functions in usage of these hidden technologies. There were plenty of ancient civilizations that were far more technologically advanced compared to modern day. Must have an open and curious mind to seek knowledge and truths.
What “ancient civilizations that were far more technologically advanced compared to modern day.”???
Name one.
Did humanity create and erect the Georgia Guidestones? It had to be an evil force if you ask me. Look at the message, the part that dictates size of world population.
https://libertywingspan.com/51493/uncategorized/the-georgia-guidestones/
Part of the monument was blown up (by a Patriot?) and the remaining stones removed.
Point is: We have both humanity and anti-humanity. We are nearing a climax in a 7-8 year Spiritual war.
They were designed and paid for by a freemason in Iowa. He was a medical doctor. Several videos on YouTube feature him
Amen.
Amen!
This government hated its citizens for at least a century!
After sitting on a beach on the western panhandle of Florida for a couple weeks and seeing the most unnatural and weird cloud formations off to the southwest I completely believe it. What better event is there to wipe out voting machines and destroy stored ballots?
Well…
Not certain if you intended to support an idea of human-controlled weather, but Helene’s track and forecasted strength was well projected as soon as she cleared the Yucatan Channel and entered the Gulf of Mexico.
Warm waters, no external weather systems, pretty much a straight course.
Cool time-lapse video!
Just like the Maui fires that destroyed smaller ‘native’ homes and neighborhoods while totally somehow avoiding rich people’s mega-mansions…because…don’t they always ?!?!
You could be right.
I don’t think you are, but you could be.
Humans have proven throughout their existence an incredible ability to embrace amazing good as well as darkly ominous depravity.
Do we have the technical ability to “weaponize” weather? I have no idea.
If we seek to confirm our worst fears about our fellow man, there are an infinite number of supporters from which we can choose to follow. If I choose to believe “chem trails” are nefarious, there is plenty of “technical data” out there to make me run for cover.
It is my very personal belief that we were provided with a divine ability to exercise “free will”. I cannot advise anyone on how to “correctly” exercise that concept. For me, my faith in God is sufficient.
I have lived in Florida for 75 years and experienced more than a few hurricanes. Some are stronger than others. Are they “more intense” in recent times? I can produce no proof either way, just that old gut feeling that says “same as before”.
I continue to pray for all affected by any disaster which should befall them. Rather than extending my opinion any further on what caused a particular disaster, I will do my best to extend my hand to help those in need to recover.
All the best.
I recently moved to 5th floor waterfront condo in Palmetto, FL. I’m on Terra Ceia Bay which is sheltered from open water. Few issues, some puddles on balcony and under front door. Water is somewhat higher than normal high tide but not threatening. Power flickered but remained on. I moved from Apollo Beach and my old neighborhood has had no power since 2 a.m.
Never seen such crappy forecasting and weather presentations in 60 years.
I haven’t either–it was very hard to find updates and info of the impending storm. Almost like they didn’t want you to notice it.
Yeah, they never said where it was to hit or when. I’ve noticed a lot of changes in hurricane reporting. You’re right…they don’t want us to have the information that might help us!
NOAA and the Universities that TAUGHT METEOROLOGY Have EVIDENTLY been teaching
SOCIAL SCIENCES
INSTEAD Of SCIENCE / HYDRODYNAMICS / ATMOSPHERICS
imo
i GET BETTER Forecasts From The BIRDS and The ANIMALS with me Watching the Clouds / Wind then from NOAA in Chicago or the WGN Weather HYPE / PRESENTATION
Praying for all affected by the hurricane …
Upstate SC. We had an hour or more of 40mph winds (not sure when it started) but its down to less than 20 now. 80% of the 200k+ in my county are without electricity. 560K in surrounding counties.
Our residential development is tucked between some Ridgeline and damage is minimal in this neighborhood. A few downed limbs, and a small tree in my yard down–uprooted–but thankfully it didn’t hit anything. Didn’t even hear it come down.
My sis 5 miles away is deep in a cove and she never lost electricity. May head her way this evening, depending on how things look.
Lineman Staging in Pensacola, FL | 25 Sep 2024 Evening
Photography by:
http://www.dustinwilliamsphotography.com/
There are even more behind the grove of tress, left side top where you can side white through the trees, and a bunch of big buses and port-a-potties. Looks like a lot of semi trailers, maybe with cots, and possibly some industrial size food trucks too.
These are ILLary’s Deplorables and President Trump’s MAGAdonians.
FHRC
THANK YOU for the Visual.
” a PICTURE IS WORTH a THOUSAND WORDS ” – Arthur Brisbane –
Good to see they are ready. When I went to town Wednesday they were staging here in East Texas waiting for the weather to start moving so they could start the drive to whichever area they were being assigned to.
The mountain flash flooding could be horrendous.
One of the worst hurricanes for death toll was 1969 Camille. 143 people died at the gulf coast impact point but 153 people died from flash flood as the hurricane stalled out at the mountain’s edge.
This is my concern with Helene that it doesn’t turn west as predicted.
Here is the description of Camille flash flooding.
Hurricane Camille[edit]

See also: Hurricane Camille
On the night of August 19–20, 1969, Nelson County was struck by disastrous flooding caused by Hurricane Camille. The hurricane hit the Gulf Coast two days earlier, weakened over land, and stalled on the eastern side of the Blue Ridge Mountains, dumping a world-record quantity of 27 inches (690 mm) of rain, mainly in a three-hour period. Over five hours, it yielded more than 37 inches (940 mm), while the previous day had seen a deluge of 5 inches (130 mm) in half an hour, with the ground already saturated. There were reports of animals drowning in trees and people who had had to cup their hands around their mouth and nose to breathe.[5]
Mudslide damage in Nelson County after the passage of Hurricane Camille
Flash floods and mudslides killed 153 people, 31 from Roseland, Tyro, and Massies Mill alone.[6] Over 133 public bridges were washed out in Nelson County, while some communities were under water.[7] In the tiny community of Davis Creek, 52 people were killed or could not be found; only 3 of 35 homes were left standing after the floodwaters receded.[6] The bodies of some people have never been found; others washed as much as 25 miles (40 km) downstream along the creeks and rivers. The entire county was virtually cut off, with many roads and virtually all bridges, telephone, radio, TV, and electric service interrupted.
The waters of the Tye, Piney, Buffalo, and Rockfish rivers flow into the James River. There was severe flooding elsewhere in Virginia, such as along the Maury River, which destroyed the town of Glasgow in Rockbridge County.
The eye is now on the west side of the ridge, approximately at the Kentucky/Tennessee border, with the rain across a wide swath west. Currently flash flood warnings are limited to areas she has already passed (upstate SC). The stronger outer rain bands are mostly now in flatland areas.
Thanks for this. We live Southeast of Cincinnati and have experienced sustained winds and rain over the last two hours. Just now it is slowing down. Some downed limbs from our old oak tree…some landing on our sunroom roof. But this is nothing compared to the damage of so many others. Just surprised us that it affected us this far north. Praying for all those impacted…
Thank the Lord
Amen. There are areas in NC that are very bad flood wise as it is – if that storm had been slower moving or stalled on the east of the ridge line…
I remember going over the I-95 bridge at Richmond and the James was 33/4 of the way up to the bridge. Never saw that before or since.
https://mercychefs.com/
Mercy Chefs is a faith-based, non-profit disaster relief organization which provides restaurant-quality meals to victims, volunteers and first responders in national emergencies and natural disasters. Their mobile kitchens are self-sustaining, able to run in areas without power, and capable of purifying their own water.
Mercy Chefs is often one of the first organizations to arrive following a major weather event and is capable of providing 15,000 meals daily to meet the needs of the devastated community. Ahead of Hurricane Helene’s landfall, Mercy Chefs pre-mobilized a response team and mobile fleet just outside the projected impact zone — with a second team on standby — to feed responders and troops stationed in Bay County, FL.
Donations can be made online, or mailed to 711 Washington Street, Portsmouth, VA 23704. You can also follow Mercy Chef’s social media (#MercyChefs) for more updates on their disaster relief efforts.
Multiple trees down. Spent the morning with the neighbors clearing trees out of the road.
Be careful. It’s easy to overdo when trying to clear tree limbs and associated debris. And stay hydrated, too!
The real danger is if this monster stalls where its sitting right now against the mountains.
Pray it keeps going west.
They said it was expected to stall from up to three days over Tennessee. Very dangerous, as the ground is patched dry as a rock from severe drought.
Up North/NorthEast Hurricane Helene damaging…
LiveStream Reporting
A better Erin Burnett thats for sure lol.
Why’s he wearing a DeSantis campaign puffer vest? Is he campaigning?
-*Chronic* Denial… 😉
Cedar Key was devastated. Hoping for more drone footage to determine extent of damage to relative’s place.
Watched the first 6+ minutes and didn’t see a single car. Strange not to see a vehicle in the mess.
Most people evacuated. Also, the drone did not fly over the high spots on Cedar Key where people move their cars to before a storm.
I watched the whole 12:40, and saw no vehicles of any sort. Perhaps the residents took the evac orders to heart.
In Upstate SC
Power out
(Actually saw on one web site that more people without power is in SC than Ga or Florida
🤷)
Dont know for sure except my power is out.
Sun is supposed to break through in an hour or so
Heading over to a neighbors house soon
Heard a couple of trees are down and on the house
Small branches everywhere in my yard but no trees or big limbs
Very informative and a great help, Sundance. Grateful for the heads up regarding “It will all be cattywampus.”
Greensboro GA area —
Passed over us just after dropping to tropical storm. Lots of wind and rain. Debris in some roadways. We still have power although some nearby areas do not. Feeling very thankful.
I went through Andrew ,when I lived in Miami and it was brutal! Also got hit by Charlie and Jeannie within 2 weeks of each other in Sebring. We had our roof damaged and our barn roof and also had two sheds blown away.
Thank God it was mild here in Lake Placid yesterday!
Just saw that the death toll has hit 21.
Central NC is ok. We had really heavy rain and several tornado warnings, but nothing hit. Please pray for western NC and southwestern Virginia. The flooding is historic. Asheville is under water.
Picture form about an hour ago in the Asheville area:
Video from inside a truck in the area as the rivers continue to rise…
One ruined semi tractor and one driver in serious jeopardy. Looks like better to stay in the truck for the moment
This looks like my car in Ft. Myers after Ian.
Current areas of major flooding in and around Asheville.
We own rental property on AMI, hoping to settle there after full retirement. No one is allowed on island so we don’t know the full impact yet. The island has been spared for decades. We’re from MN, so not even sure how to deal with ins. & all.
We live on a canal on a barrier island in South Pinellas County Florida and we did stay. I have never seen so much water in my life. The road was a lake. Our downstairs flooded but our boat held as some other boats didn’t and ended up stuck on their dock and one boat sank at the marina. We were so fortunate to keep power as just on the other side of our canal they all lost power and it has not yet been restored. My oldest daughter who lives in low lying South Pasadena evacuated to higher ground. She put sand bags out but the storm surge was too much and unfortunately her entire apartment got flooded. Our younger daughter in Tampa has no power but everything else is fine. We have already started our cleanup at our condo knowing there are others in this area who are much worse off than us. My husband is our condo association president and is working with all the property owners to help them and assess damage. We are thankful because it could have been worse for us. We are saying many prayers today for all who have been impacted. The most important thing is that we are all safe.
Update: Our water in Tierra Verde was shut off about 8pm last night and we do not know when it will be restored. Today Pinellas County is bringing in two truckloads with pallets of water for the residents here. We will leave if it does not get restored soon. Walked around yesterday and there is lots of debris everywhere, utility boxes exposed, and most of whatever mulch was left is piled on the sidewalk. Roads along the beaches area look like a beach and are covered with sand, some cars are buried in the sand. Popular local restaurants along the beaches area are totally destroyed. Infrastructure in Pinellas County has certainly taken a beating. Heartbreaking.
GOD HAS BEEN GOOD – The HURRICANE PASSED THRU The LOWLANDS QUICKLY…
WE PRAY For THOSE IN NEED From the Storm’s Path and THOSE GRIEVING From LOSS of LIFE or HOME.
Now WE PRAY for the Hurricane Remnants to LEAVE the MIDWEST / TENNESSEE AREA – SOY BEANS and CORN WERE
Being Harvested in the Area, in Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky.
LORD, IF IT BE THY WILL – Please Move the Steering Currents of Wind a LITTLE MORE from the WEST.
HUMBLY, We PRAY FOR the MIDWEST.HARVEST in The OHIO VALLEY Region.
Hmmm ruining and destroying food supplies–seems to be a pattern
New Port Richey, FL here: Flooded. Hurricane Idalia floods us last August. We were 95% finished with rebuild from Idalia.
Son and GF on the Punta Gorda Port Charlotte line and said they stayed inside and watch movies nothing much happened.
Not far down the road Ft Meyer Beach flooded.
Ya never know
Currently LIVE UPDATES from Fox: Hurricane Helene water rescues, 5 fatalities reported, 4M without power” on YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/live/7WidGRGv7Oc?si=ScmrQLNEY8YiHj6t
How is everything on your island Sundance? I heard there were tornadoes.
Sundance’s pep talks are the best!
In the Open Thread, Treeper Snellville Bob stated an hour ago that Twitter was unavailable where he lives near Atlanta.
I suggested he might see if he could access Nitter.
Just in case others in Georgia aren’t able to access it , either, here’s a couple links to get into Nitter
https://nitter.poast.org/thelastrefuge2
https://nitter.poast.org/realDonaldTrump/with_replies
Battered in Pinellas County. Power out for 18 hours.
Own a house in west Pasco Co Fla near Hudson. As expected anything west of US19 is flooded. Think we are probably OK (about a mile in from 19).
BITD, going north civilization pretty much ended at Spring Hill / Brownsville. Inglis was in the middle of nowhere. Today Crystal River is huge with new homes / mobiles. I hope folks there with no prior experience are doing OK. My impression for power is that Duke is better than FP&L.
These days if you want rural you need to go up to Chiefland (also bigly Trump territory).
Rabun county in extreme NE Georgia. Wind woke me at 4am along with torrential rai. Most of county is without power including me. Lots of flooding and lots of power lines downed by trees. I’ve been riding around with a chainsaw helping clear some of the more isolated roads which would otherwise take days for the usual responders to get to.
Beautiful country that
.
I think this is the Pigeon River
More than 50 people stranded on roof of East Tennessee hospital
https://www.wsmv.com/2024/09/27/more-than-50-people-stranded-roof-east-tennessee-hospital/
We’re in the East TN mountains. Got nearly 8″ of rain in the last 36 hours.
A nearby hospital is badly flooded with several people stranded on the roof.
We’ve had extremely high winds since mid morning. We lost some large limbs and branches but the trees are still standing,
and half of the vinyl siding has blown off the back of the house, but at least we have power.
Praying for the lost lives and for the people of FL to recover.