Hurricane Floyd

Hurricanes I've Experienced



Wind Blowing IconAgnes, June, 1972

    My first experience with a hurricane was while I was living in upstate New York, enrolled at Elmira College and working at Corning Hospital. Agnes traveled from the Gulf of Mexico through Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, then out into the Atlantic to pick up more strength before coming into New York and Pennsylvania. It was a very early hurricane, and although not strong by wind speed standards, it created havoc by flooding rains -- over 7 inches in Elmira, NY. I was in Elmira when the floods hit on June 23, 1972. The river crested at over 25 feet, flood stage was 12 feet. The folks in Corning, NY, had been told, as they went to bed, not to worry, that the dikes would hold. My mother, who worked with the Red Cross, had phoned me at work the day before, warning me to get out of town, given what she knew was already going on upstream. The dikes in Corning (crested at almost 41 feet, flood stage was 29) collapsed, and a wall of water swept through the valley. Where I lived, in Elmira, the dikes did hold, but the water rose higher than they stood, so the flood waters came up slowly. They came up to within about 4 blocks from where we lived. That was a close call. It was weeks before we could get out of the county and back into Corning. I thought I would never have another experience with a flood like that. Agnes killed 129 people.

Wind Blowing IconDiane, September, 1984

   Hurricane Diane made landfall near Wilmington, North Carolina. The center of the storm passed about 10 to 15 miles to the east of our home in Rountree (which was at 35.5 N, 77.5 W). Maximum sustained winds were about 50 mph. We suffered no loss to property.

Wind Blowing IconCharley, August, 1986

   Hurricane Charley ran across far eastern North Carolina, about 90 miles east of us, with maximum winds of about 80 mph. We suffered no loss to property.

Wind Blowing IconBob, August, 1991

   Category 3 Hurricane Bob skirted the Outer Banks well east of us, with maximum winds of about 115 mph. We suffered no loss to property.

Wind Blowing IconEmily, August and September, 1993

   Category 3 Hurricane Emily skirted the Outer Banks well east of us, with maximum winds of about 115 mph. We suffered no loss to property.

Wind Blowing IconAllison, June, 1995

   Tropical Storm Allison pass about 40 miles to our southeast, with winds of about 45 mph. We suffered no loss to property.

Wind Blowing IconArthur, June, 1996

    We were under the gun in 1996. Tropical Storm Arthur skirted the North Carolina coast on the 20th of June. This was just a preview of what was to come.

Wind Blowing IconBertha, July, 1996

   I was in Switzerland with my wife and son when Bertha hit. Our daughter, Lotus, was home alone. Being in a big old house during a hurricane made quite an impression on Lotus. Early in the storm she went out in the back yard to pick up items that could blow away. The screen door locked itself (the hook fell into the hole) when it slammed, locking Lotus out of the house. She had to break her way in. The center of the hurricane passed about 15 miles to the east of our house in Rountree, with winds of about 75 mph. We suffered no property damage.

Wind Blowing IconFran, September, 1996

   Fran caused a lot of wind damage (115 to 125 mph) here, and some flooding, (about a foot of rain) but nothing like what was to come in 1999. The center passed 60 to 70 miles southwest and west of us. Fran took out trees in our yard, including a pecan tree that landed on my daughter Lotus' car. The wind was so strong that it drove water through the walls of our old house. All we could do was sit and watch the water run down the wall and collect on the floor.

Wind Blowing IconJosephine, October, 1996

   Tropical Storm Josephine passed abut 25 miles southeast of us, but was not very impressive after Fran.

Wind Blowing IconDanny, July, 1997

   Danny was only a minor nuisance here in eastern North Carolina. It pretty much blew its wad earlier, on Alabama. We only got 2 to 3 inches of rain from it. It passed about 25 miles west of us with winds of about 40 mph.

Wind Blowing IconBonnie, August, 1998

   Bonnie came ashore near Jacksonville, NC, about 70 miles due south of us, with winds of 100 mph. It moved northeast, with the center passing about 40 miles east of us with 70 mph winds. It gave us about 8 inches of rain, but no major problems here in Pitt county.

Wind Blowing IconDennis & Floyd, August and September, 1999

   Dennis and Floyd combined to give us a one-two punch. Dennis gave us about 8 inches of rain during an 8 day period late in August and early in September, saturating the soil. Dennis stalled off the coast as a hurricane for several days and then came in as a tropical storm, the center passing right over us on the 5th of September with winds of 40 to 50 mph.

   Ten days after getting soaked by Dennis, on Sept. 16, 1999, Floyd delivered the knockout punch. It came in near Cape Fear, with winds of 105 mph. The governor announced that all state employees, excepting "critical" employees, were to be dismissed at 2 PM to go home and prepare for Floyd. Classes were dismissed, and the campus quickly emptied. I stayed to backup computer files and secure my office and the computer lab. When I tried to leave at 2:30, I was told that, as a member of the personnel committee, I was "critical" and would have to stay for its meeting. I objected, but stayed. I left for home at 3:30 and took an alternate route to avoid those areas which I know are the first to flood. Even on this route, I was lucky to get home. There was water on or flowing across the road on which I live, and cars off to the side, where they had skidded into the ditch or stalled from flooding.

    Overnight we watched the news of Floyd on TV. I avoided the Weather Channel though, since I was still upset with them for having repeatedly said, while Floyd was headed west towards Florida, "we are all hoping it will turn north." Well, turn north it did, right into us! It generated numerous tornadoes. A little after 8 they announced that there was a tornado in Tuscarora and that it was headed towards Fort Barnwell and would be in Grifton by 8:30. I put a ruler on my map from Tuscarora to Fort Barnwell to Grifton and was distressed to see that Rountree (where I lived) was right on that straight line. Fortunately, the tornado (detected by radar) missed us or didn't touch down there.

    Floyd was projected to pass close to us on our west, but fortunately for us it passed on our east instead (winds are generally worse on the east side of a hurricane). It did pass very close (near New Bern and little Washington), but had weakened somewhat by the time the strongest winds (80 mph) reached us, about 7 in the morning, when the real action started:

    About 7:15 our cable went out. We hooked up the TV to the antenna instead.

    About 7:30 our electric went out.

    About 7:45 the gigantic old oak tree by the side porch fell. It did not make much noise. Earlier we had noticed that the water in Lake Rountree (our yard) was clear except by the base of that tree, where it was clay colored. Now we know that color was from the roots pulling up. The tree fell towards the road, not the house, thankfully. It missed our cars by a foot or two. It was quite a sight -- the base of the tree (roots and earth) formed a giant disk on its side about 12 feet high. The ground was so soft that branches on the down side just dug into the earth.

    About 8:00 the pole in our yard to which our power line is secured snapped and went down. I had been watching it lean in the wind, and was watching it when it went down. The power line was draped over the felled oak tree and then ran on the ground to our house. It pulled the line and meter off of our house, but the line did not break. It was quite low running across the road to the transformer on the big post there. The winds also folded back one panel of the tin on our roof.

    About 8:15 the middle (of three) tobacco barns on the west side of house went down. I heard it, but thought only a piece of its tin roof had blown off. The whole barn collapsed to the ground.

    While I was relatively dry at home, East Carolina University's campus was flooding along Tenth Street. Click here for Photos of ECU Flooding.

   Our relief at having survived the passing of the storm was followed by days of dread while rivers and creeks spilled over their banks and flooded large areas of eastern North Carolina. Contentnea creek, which runs nears our house, flooded large areas of adjacent Greene County, but stopped about a mile short of our house.

    I spent over a week cleaning up our yard, much of which was covered by the enormous oak that fell. There were still many areas under water, and the damage to roads and bridges was great. East Carolina University got a little revenge when their football team upset the Miami Hurricanes in Raleigh. It was Miami's misfortune to play a team which had a grudge against hurricanes of any type.

    The flood waters brought out one of my favorite plants, Lycoris radiata, also known as spider lilies. These strange plants are nowhere to be seen until late summer or early Autumn, when they suddenly send up strange but beautiful flowers. The foliage follows later. The flood waters also brought many fire ants (ouch) and Dasymutilla occidentalis, cow killers to our yard. The cow killer is an interesting and beautiful wingless wasp, whose sting is said to be very nasty.

Wind Blowing IconIrene, October, 1999

   As if we hadn't already had enough flooding, on October, 17, 1999, Irene marched up to our doorstep and then turned away at the last moment -- but her rains caused renewed flooding. My son had a friend over to the house this day. He took his friend back home about 5 PM. I was worried that he might encounter flooded roads. He did manage to get his friend home, but when he tried to get back to our home, he found that all roads to our house were flooded out. We were on an island that evening.

   The European branch of our family was not immune to hurricane force winds and flooding in 1999 either. The storms that hit western Europe with hurricane force winds in December of 1999 flooded my sister's house in France and caused damage to structures owned by our relatives and friends in Switzerland.

Wind Blowing IconKyle, October, 2002

   Kyle was a coast hugger, reduced to a tropical depression when it passed east of us, causing us no problems.

Wind Blowing IconIsabel, September 2003

   After Floyd, we decided it was time to move into a new house, one with no trees close to the house. In December of 1999 we bought a house not far from our old house. The new house had been built in 1997 and had suffered only minor damage (to screens, shingles, and decorative shutters) and no flooding with Floyd. We had three hurricane-free summers before Hurricane Isabel visited us in our new house.

    Hurricane Isabel was a category 5 monster when it became apparent that it was likely to strike the east coast. Lucky for us, it weakened to a strong category 2 hurricane before it visited us. The university closed at 2 PM on Wednesday the 17th. We had already been making preparations for the arrival of Isabel, but there are always last minute things to do. I stopped by my son's apartment (a junior at the university) on the way home and gave him a flashlight, batteries, and some hurricane cash. Having experienced hurricanes out in the county with us, he wanted to stay in town and see what it was like there. Before sunset we picked tomatoes, eggplants, and okra from our gardens, put my car in the garage, put cinder blocks against the front and side storm doors, removed the screens from the windows, and so on.

    We had strong winds Thursday morning, as Isabel approached the coast. We lost power about 11:30 that morning, got it back two hours later, and lost it again one hour later. The winds were not as strong as we expected, but we got a bit more rain than I had expected. The National Weather Service reported that the storm brought to my location sustained (two minute) winds of not more than 40 mph and peak gusts of a little more than 50 mph, at about 3 PM. Peak gusts were about 100 mph on the Outer Banks and some inland locations such as Plymouth, northeast of us. We got about 5 inches of rain in my section of Pitt County.

    We went out in the storm once on Thursday morning, to move a large branch that had fallen close to the doghouse. I also wired down the TV cable box on the side of the house, as the cover had blown off. We were not able to get out again until after the eye had passed north of us. The eye came over northeastern Pitt county, about 15 miles from us. The morning winds came from the north, and later rotated to northwest, west, and then southwest. When they came from the northwest they blew directly at the door to our deck and forced water under that door. The rain was horizontal at that time.

    The damage on our street was not bad. We watched the winds blow a metal storage shed into the font yard of one neighbor's yard, and feared that it would blow over into our yard and hit our cars, but it stayed put. The shed was flipped over on its roof, and the winds crushed the walls down against the roof, which reduced the surface area exposed to the winds. The neighbor on the other side lost a big Bradford pear tree, and other Bradford pears in the neighborhood were damaged too. Our house lost some shingles from the roof, as did our back door neighbor's house. Our biggest loss was a russet apple tree, which had just born fruit for the first time this year. The winds had blown it over and snapped the trunk a few inches below ground level. Our prune-plum tree was also blown over, but I have been able to stand it back up. Our swimming pool was full of debris as was the yard, so there is a lot of cleaning up to do.

    My eldest daughter, Athena, and her family, were hunkered down in their condo about 8 miles from here, and my son, Sol, was out in the storm in Greenville. He is majoring in Physical Geography, currently taking a class in environmental hazards, and was hoping to see another natural disaster (like the flooding from Floyd). He stayed outside during the storm, but was very disappointed with it. The rest of us are quite pleased that it was not so bad. As with Floyd, the Lycoris radiata made their first appearance in association with the storm.

Wind Blowing IconAlex, Bonnie, Charley, and Gaston, August, 2004

    Hurricane Alex grazed the Outer Banks on the 3rd of August, 2004. I was in the hospital that morning, having some minor surgery. It did not affect us here in Pitt County. In fact, we had beautiful weather. On the 12th of August Tropical Storm Bonnie made landfall in the panhandle of Florida and then the remnants ran up through North Carolina, spawning a few tornados and dumping a couple of inches of rain on us. Hurricane Charley (Category 4) made landfall near Fort Meyers, FL, and then crossed the state to enter the Atlantic. It made a second landfall near the border between South Carolina and North Carolina as a Category 1 hurricane and then rapidly moved northeast, crossing right over us. At 11 AM on the 12th of August Charley was at Latitude 33.2 N, 79.0 W (75 mph winds), at 2 PM it was at 34.8 N, 77.9 W (70 mph), and at 5 PM it was at 36.0 N, 77.0 W (70 mph). My house is at 35.49 North, 77.46 West (obtained using the Geocode Eagle). We got between 4 and 5 inches of rain in a short period of time and had wind gusts of about 40 mph. Charley moved through so quickly that it did not cause much damage. It did spawn some tornados and caused some flash flooding. The only damage at my place was that my prune plum tree was leaning more than before -- it was already leaning a bit from last year's hurricane. I pulled it straight with some rope and a stake the next morning. The branch that runs along the border of my property was quite swollen and running fast, but did not come up all the way to my garden (but came close). TS Gaston made landfall in South Carolina on the 29th of August and then passed through North Carolina. It stayed far enough west of us (near Raleigh) that it caused us no major problems. The winds did blow pine needles and bark and crepe myrtle flowers into our swimming pool, but we did not get a lot of rain.  My son, Sol, prepared a this map of the path these hurricanes took:

Map showing track of hurricanes through North Carolina in 2004

Wind Blowing IconOphelia, September 2005

    Hurricane Ophelia grazed the coast of North Carolina on the 14th and 15th of September, 2005.  Considerable damage was caused along the coast, due to heavy rain and Ophelia's slow movement, but here in Pitt county we were happy to get the much needed rain, about two inches.

Wind Blowing IconAlberto, June, 2006

    The center of tropical storm Alberto passed thirty miles to our west on the afternoon the the 14th of June.  It was not very impressive, but did lead to some storm damage and flooding.  On my drive home from the office I noticed fields of corn that were blown down.  I pretty much knew then what my garden would be like.  When I got home I found that everything was blown down, including my corn.

Wind Blowing IconErnesto, September, 2006

    The center of tropical storm Ernesto passed thirteen miles to our west in the early morning of the 1st of September.  It was quite impressive for a tropical storm, well organized with lots of rain and strong winds.  I took pictures of flooding.

 

 

birds flying

back to hurricane links pageClick here to return to my Hurricanes/Weather Links Page

spider in web
Contact Information for the Webmaster,
Dr. Karl L. Wuensch

updated
This page most recently revised on 1. September 2006. link to ECU home page