Hurricane Florence pummels Carolinas without respite

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Millions of people in the path of Florence are hunkering down Friday as the monster storm pummels North and South Carolina, bringing catastrophic inundations and forceful, destructive winds. Here are snapshots of people struggling to cope with the slow-grinding storm.

SEVEN MONTHS PREGNANT AND ‘SCARED TO DEATH’

As Glorious Elting stood on her front porch Thursday, it suddenly got very dark and the wind started howling. It hadn’t occurred to her until then how much danger she might be in. She’s seven months pregnant and moved alone to Lumberton, North Carolina, from Poughkeepsie, New York, less than two weeks ago.

She’s never been through a hurricane and has nowhere else to go.

She said Friday that she called her sister and told her she was scared to death. She asked her to pray for her, and to tell her mother she’s sorry if she dies. She now lives in South Lumberton, a neighborhood devastated by flooding after Hurricane Matthew in 2016. Many of the homes around her have remained boarded up and vacant ever since.

She wept all day and spent Friday afternoon on her couch, reading her Quran and praying.

“My baby girl is kicking and letting me know she’s a part of everything that’s going on and she’s scared too.”

She has supplies and a friend, Denise Hunt, came to stay with her. She is mostly worried the stress will cause her to go into premature labor, and if she does, whether authorities will be available in the storm to come to take her to the hospital.

“I’m scared to death,” she said. “I don’t know what to do.”

SEASHELLS ON THE SEA SHORE

When Hurricane Florence made landfall some 70 miles (113 kilometers) to the northeast early Friday, Russ Lewis was walking on the sand on Myrtle Beach, looking for seashells.

He was a lonely figure, first a tiny dot of light as he used a small flashlight to scan the water’s edge, then widening his search as a gray, overcast dawn broke.

The persistent rain hadn’t started yet in Myrtle Beach at sunrise. But the winds started to howl and gust, rising above 30 mph (48 kph), according to the weather station at the airport.

“I came over the dune, and I was like, ‘I can’t even hear the ocean,'” Lewis said.

Forecasters warn the weather will go downhill all day in Myrtle Beach as Florence moves onshore Friday. Conditions may not improve until well into Saturday depending on the system’s track and how much strength it can keep after landfall. Inland, forecasters warned of 20 inches of rain or more that could cause major, catastrophic flooding.

Lewis said hurricanes are the best time to look for shells. The heavy waves churn up rare items like conchs, sand dollars and shark teeth. He had several of the rare items Friday.

“Back in Matthew I found a conch shell this big,” Lewis said, holding his hands about 9 inches (23 centimeters) apart. “I gave it to a friend when his baby daughter was born. I wrote her name and the date on it.”

DONUT MAN OPEN FOR BUSINESS

“Donut Man” Joseph Santos might run the only place to eat that is open on Myrtle Beach as Hurricane Florence approaches.

Santos and his wife spent most of Friday preparing, baking, and selling doughnuts. A steady stream of police officers, firefighters and other first responders came to the Donut Man restaurant as the rains and winds of Florence settled in. Santos welcomes anyone, but stays open for the people who have to work no matter what.

“I see the first responders. They put their lives on the line every day of the year. I can stay open for them,” Santos said, taking a brief break from the kitchen as his wife of 47 years, Maria, worked the cash register.

Santos moved to Myrtle Beach from Massachusetts 14 years ago. He bought an old bank and turned it into a restaurant. That wasn’t a deliberate decision, but the sturdy building and vault in the back help him stay open no matter the weather.

A WHIRLIGIG SHOW

All those pinwheels and whirligigs spun with extraordinary speed and fervor Friday at Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park in Wilson, North Carolina.

They got quite a boost from Hurricane Florence’s winds.

On an otherwise somber day across the state, the downtown park full of whirling contraptions provided at least a bit of a light diversion.

This eastern North Carolina city is located about 120 miles (193 kilometers) north of Wrightsville Beach, where Florence made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane Friday morning, and was receiving fierce winds and heavy rain from one of the storm’s bands.

Tim White – a 64-year-old electrician, lifelong resident of the city and self-proclaimed friend of Simpson, the late artist who created the contraptions out of salvaged metal – walked through the park Friday afternoon to watch the whirligigs spin with his wife.

He said Simpson and his son spent “all their spare time” assembling the dozens of mechanisms for the park before his death in 2013.

FALLING TREES A NUISANCE – AND A DANGER

Numerous trees were down in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Wilmington, North Carolina, blocking driveways and falling on cars and the roofs of at least two houses.

Chris Butcher of the Arborist Plus tree service said his crew had just arrived from Edgewood, Florida, with chain saws, extended tree-trimmers , a generator, and a small front-end loader.

“I’ve been on every hurricane since Fran in 1996,” Butcher said. “We are here to help. And make some money.”

He was helping Mike Kiernan clear trees that had fallen on or near vehicles and damaged the front of the house.

WAITING IT OUT – OR NOT

Bruce Manney eyed the creek at the end of his street in Lumberton, North Carolina.

Two years ago, during Hurricane Matthew, water poured from it and inundated the neighborhood. His neighbors had to be rescued from their houses. Most evacuated this time. But Manney just moved in a month ago and thought he’d be able to wait it out.

“I don’t know anymore, I’m starting to get concerned,” he said.

Authorities say the Lumber River, which feeds the creek that flooded this neighborhood, is likely to crest on Sunday even higher than it did during Matthew.

That storm devastated the city, and many neighborhoods have not recovered. The elementary school behind Manney’s home was rendered a total loss in the flood and permanently closed.

He watched the downpour from his porch where he marked how high he’s been told the floodwaters rose, about a foot from the floor.

“If it keeps on like this, I’m getting out of here,” he said.

RESTAURANTS PROVIDE SOLACE – AND SOMETHING TO DO

In Greenville, North Carolina, most roads were open as the city experienced the equivalent of a conventional soaking rainfall late Friday morning.

But most businesses in the home of the region’s primary medical center were closed, some protected by plywood over the windows and with sandbags around the base of doorways.

Some food eateries remained available with the determined operation of the odd Bojangles and Waffle House restaurants.

A Cracker Barrel restaurant was doing a brisk business. Nursing home worker Cameron Willis, 27, and East Carolina University accounting student Justin Weathers, 22, delighted in finding the restaurant open and a chance to interact with other people.

The neighbors at an apartment complex almost completely vacated ahead of Hurricane Florence said they had plenty of food available at home but needed to see what was happening in the city.

“Bored and stuck in the house. There’s only so much to do,” Weathers sad.

TOURISTS NOWHERE TO BE SEEN

The heart of downtown historic district of Charleston, South Carolina, is nearly empty as Hurricane Florence makes its slow trek across the Carolinas.

Pat Reilly of neighboring Mt. Pleasant was one of the few people out walking Friday morning on Market Street, where downtown shops typically teeming with tourists were boarded up and fortified with sandbags.

Reilly sells real estate in the Charleston area has seen his share of storms over the past two decades, including Tropical Storm Gaston in 2004 and Hurricane Matthew in 2016.

“I love a good storm. I haven’t left for any of them over the years,” he said.

Potentially heavy rainfall was expected in Charleston as Florence creeps inland. The skies were dry Friday morning with breezy winds and occasional strong gusts blowing the Spanish moss hanging from live oak branches.

THE BEST-LAID PLANS …

Steve Wareheim says his home in Shallotte, North Carolina, is holding up as Hurricane Florence creeps closer.

Wareheim said he lost power early Friday. He bought a generator earlier this week, but at the moment, it wasn’t very helpful.

“I wish I read the instructions a little more carefully on that generator. It can’t be operated near rain,” Wareheim said. “So I’m going to have to wait until the rain stops. That may be a while.”

The National Weather Service said the area should get heavy rain through Sunday.

Wareheim said so far the wind has only knocked down branches and limbs small enough to be carried. “Nothing you need to get a chain saw after yet,” he said by phone.

Wareheim was preparing for the heaviest winds from Florence, whose center was about 15 miles (24 kilometers) from his house about 4 miles (6 kilometers) inland.

SAFETY A FEW MILES INLAND

Kathy Griffin was hunkering down Friday in a hotel in Wilmington, North Carolina with her husband. They decided to leave their fifth-floor Wrightsville Beach condominium before Hurricane Florence trapped them.

Still, storm conditions were frightful for the retired teacher and realtor.

Griffin said she was jolted awake when the power went off at the hotel as some of the storm’s strongest bands lashed Wilmington with wind and rain.

As she sat in the hotel lobby eating a cold breakfast of bananas, cereal bars, and pastries, she recalled that the decision to heed the mandatory evacuation order for her area wasn’t difficult.

“If you are over there and something bad happens, you’re out of luck,” she said.

She said her Wrightsville Beach unit was insured against flooding and also has glass strong enough to withstand 135 mph winds.

She wasn’t as lucky when a property she owns in Florida was heavily damaged by Hurricane Irma last year.

“We have a house that was destroyed in Irma,” Griffin said. “She came and she went, and it trashed everything inside.”