About a third of the USGS monitoring stations on the upper French Broad are out.
Haven't heard from son and daughter in law since power went out in Asheville, which is without water, power and cell service. Reports of catastrophic devastation are popping up everywhere, with whole stretches of towns/buildings in western NC virtually washed away. Most of this is going unreported, because of the difficulty in finding a cell signal and in getting around.
My son's crew escaped downtown Asheville on secondary and tertiary roads and found an Airbnb house somewhere near Statesville. Now we just have to figure out how to get them back to Denver today or tomorrow, but at least they found a place with power, water and cell service. We heard from our people in Boone and there's no good news, really. A couple of the main roads are blown out in places where the secondary roads are also cut off, so big chunks of the communities surrounding Boone are safe but isolated from resources. Keep WNC in your thoughts and prayers because there is not going to be a quick fix.
Biltmore Village was completely under water last I saw. It gets flooded from two different directions so that area always gets hit hard.One of my daughter's Enloe friends is an App senior. She happened to be in Cary for some birthdays and missed it all. She did send video of the floating port-a-john.
One of our former partners is in the Biltmore Village area. I wonder how he made out.
This is a good idea. The Food Bank could use the help regardless. They're always in need of free labor.The Food Bank does a great job on stuff like this. I just made a contribution, and I'm going to see if I can organize a group trip from the museum lab to work over there for an afternoon.