After Dorian, ...Wrecked Ocracoke Island, Still Closed To Non-Residents
Amid flooding and rising sea levels, residents of one barrier island wonder if its time to retreat Is this really sustainable? The answer is pretty clearly no.
Cross post from Environment and Energy group with the hat tip to hatrack.
By Frances Stead Sellers
9 November 2019
OCRACOKE, North Carolina (The Washington Post) On any normal late-fall day, the ferries that ply the 30 miles between Swan Quarter and this barrier island might carry vacationing retirees, sports fishermen and residents enjoying mainland getaways after the busy summer tourist season.
But two months ago, Hurricane Dorian washed away all signs of normalcy here. After buzz-cutting the Bahamas, the giant storm rolled overhead, raising a seven-foot wall of water in its wake that sloshed back through the harbor, invading century-old homes that have never before taken in water and sending islanders such as post office head Celeste Brooks and her two grandchildren scrambling into their attics.
Ocracoke has been closed to visitors ever since. Island-bound ferries carry yawning container trucks to haul back the sodden detritus of destroyed homes. And Ocockers proud descendants of the pilots and pirates who navigated these treacherous shores are faced with a reckoning: whether this sliver of sand, crouched three feet above sea level between the Atlantic Ocean and Pamlico Sound, can survive the threats of extreme weather and rising sea levels. And if it cant, why rebuild?
Thats the unspoken question. Thats what nobody wants to say, said Erin Baker, the only doctor to serve this community of 1,000. Its a question of how do we continue to have life here.
Snip.
More at the link.
https://desdemonadespair.net/2019/11/amid-flooding-and-rising-sea-levels-residents-of-one-barrier-island-wonder-if-its-time-to-retreat-is-this-really-sustainable-the-answer-is-pretty-clearly-no.html
https://upload.democraticunderground.com/1127133768