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Jilly_in_VA

(14,624 posts)
Wed Aug 20, 2025, 12:17 PM Aug 2025

Outer Banks braces for 'sadness and devastation' as Hurricane Erin roars by

The center of Hurricane Erin will roar past North Carolina’s Outer Banks at a distance of less than 300 miles, setting up a vulnerable region for an intense battering as forecasters warn of two-story waves towering in the ocean and storm surge rushing inland that could destroy dunes, threaten beachfront houses and flood roads.

The ribbon of narrow, barrier islands is home to tens of thousands of permanent residents, but its population swells during the summer and more than 2 million people visit the region yearly. The Outer Banks' remote beaches, dunes and oceanfront houses, are among the "most dynamic natural landscapes occupied by man," U.S. Geological Survey scientists wrote in 2016.

As Erin tracked north, surfers took advantage of the building swells and others evacuated along Highway 12, the sole highway that connects the Outer Banks. Officials warned the road – known to flood even during seasonal high tides – could be impassable for days.

Long popular with beach dwellers and tourists for its scenic vistas and remote ambiance, the Outer Banks have more recently become known for the homes on eroded beaches that collapse into the ocean during hurricanes, winter nor’easters and other tidal events. But islanders say the videos can't convey the enormous complexities of the challenges their communities face.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2025/08/20/hurricane-erin-outer-banks/85730402007/

The Native Americans knew better than to build permanent settlements or homes in these places, but white Americans with too much money just can't resist....and then they whine...

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Outer Banks braces for 'sadness and devastation' as Hurricane Erin roars by (Original Post) Jilly_in_VA Aug 2025 OP
We vacationed their several times gab13by13 Aug 2025 #1
Wonderful area, but already seeing clips of beach houses with water a foot or two high under entire house. Silent Type Aug 2025 #2
FEMA -- Finding Emergency Management Absent TheBlackAdder Aug 2025 #3

gab13by13

(32,789 posts)
1. We vacationed their several times
Wed Aug 20, 2025, 12:23 PM
Aug 2025

Was it Rodanthe where at high tide the water was always an issue in the road? That's with just normal weather.

 

Silent Type

(12,412 posts)
2. Wonderful area, but already seeing clips of beach houses with water a foot or two high under entire house.
Wed Aug 20, 2025, 12:33 PM
Aug 2025

Have to admit, if I had money might risk it for a house right on beach or with a mountain view and stream.

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