It felt as if we had weeks to dread Hurricane Helene. The weather service tracked it from nothing, to strong winds, and then the named stages of a tropical storm to a massive hurricane that slammed Florida. It was almost a relief when the clouds rolled through and we could get started with the North Carolina version of the storm. I have no idea how much rain we were to get or how strong the winds would be, and the ending totals varied as it progressed. I can tell you there was a LOT of rain and winds that seemed weak much of the time.
Grandson David and Brit were concerned about a tree falling on their house, so they asked for asylum on our street. David stayed here with their dog, and Brit was officially with her parents across the street. Most of the time she was at the fire house as a volunteer, actively helping rescue people from rising waters of the creek. Jonathan Creek, my former destination for walking, dumped up to a foot of mud in the firehouse itself. I live on the lower slope of a mountain and would never be in danger from that creek. Before a drop of rain fell, our neighbors were in a texting group as we geared up for the storm. As it turned out, I was the only one who needed help.
David took Beatrix for a final walk before bedtime. He didn’t know why she pulled so hard to get to bushes bordering the pasture to the side of the house. He soon found out. Skunk!! The skunk sprayed, mostly hitting David’s jacket. He rinsed and sprayed his clothes and left them on the porch to be thoroughly blown by the wind.
The storm was in full force when David got up at 4:45 a.m. to go to work. I was thankful he thought to let me know he got to Lowe’s safely. That’s about the time the county said no one should be on the road to have everything clear for emergency vehicles. At a reasonable hour, neighbor Shawn texted to see how I was getting along.
I replied, “I’ve made coffee. Things should look better in a few minutes. I’m very unprepared for this with a spooked dog, no dog food, no treats, and a house that reeks of skunk!!”
I told her I didn’t think the dog had been sprayed by the skunk. I was dealing with everything and thought it would be amusing by afternoon. She replied that Bob would come over to fetch Beatrix after the wind died down, which he did. I had petted her the night before, but she never let me near her after David went to work.
Shawn wrote that the windows on the north side of her house were leaking. (Mine didn’t.) She added that maybe now my house would smell better. Hers smelled like skunk. I apologized, because I couldn’t smell it on the dog. She wrote, “I’ve mixed up a solution for Bea – baking soda, hydrogen peroxide, and Dawn.”
Below is a video taken on the north side of my house through the glass of the door.
When David picked up the dog after work, Shawn and later Bob came over to visit for a while. Everything smelled better on the windblown porch. Their dog and Beatrix kept each other busy playing and nipping at each other. It seemed a fitting end to the hurricane.
We were blessed to have no damage on the street. Winds and floodwaters wreaked havoc in towns and near all the streams in the area.
I’m so glad you didnt experience what my son Chris is dealing with in SC. Trees falling in the road as he tries to make it to his job site with no power, as if his bosses don’t realize he is doing the best he can in the aftermath of the storm.
You are lucky to live on the mountain, but I was still worried about tree damage or windows breaking, etc. Seems the skunk was the worst of it, poor thing. He was probably freaking out about the storm then startled by the dog.
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I haven’t spent any sympathy on the skunk.
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I imagine not!
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So glad you are safe and undamaged. I dread hurricanes
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Hurricanes usually aren’t bad in the Carolina mountains, because we are so far from the original action. The rain was excessive. I read 20 inches somewhere, but I don’t know that it is accurate.
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So glad you’re okay! Pete and I were seeing the news stories about every place around you (Waynesville, Maggie Valley, etc.), and starting to worry for a minute there. Hopefully the skunk is okay too. LOL.
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All animals seem fine. The horses just kept grazing.
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That’s good!
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Glad everything was ok. Also glad that the dog had a playmate. That helped everyone since he didn’t seem to fond of you. 🙂
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Wow, that is a lot of rain out your back door! It is fortunate the wind was not bad at least. So David is nearby? For some reason, I thought he moved somewhere further. It rained heavily here, but that is not unusual during hurricane season, even though it tracked east of us. Good to hear all is well with you.
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David is about 20 minutes away.
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After reading all of the reports fron NC. It is so good to read you are ok. I have been some what concerned even though I figured being on the up side would be on your favor..Thanks for the safe report.
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I was THRILLED to have a safe report. Thanks for thinking of me .
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Never experienced a hurricane and hoped I never do, they would be scary
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This one had lots of rain, causing flooding in the mountains. The homes in my neighborhood had no damage.
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Scary stuff, but I’m glad you are okay. Skunk smell is so unpleasant!! Takes forever to completely go away.
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I guess I’ve gotten used to the skunk odor.
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So glad you are OK. Too bad about the skunk. That is such a terrible smell to get rid of.
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I hate to say I’m getting used to the skunk odor.
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😀
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So glad to read your report. I have been thinking about you. My sister and Brother-in-law in NE Tennessee got hit hard.
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I’m sorry they were affected. I think there is a lot of damage in my area, but I haven’t driven anywhere to see it.
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Best to stay put. Let the clean-up crews do their thing.
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Glad you are safe. I’ve seen some horrible damage in Asheville, a before-and-after picture was especially devastating. You are lucky to be unscathed except for the skunk smell.
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Yes, I’m lucky. I haven’t been in the car, so I haven’t seen any of the hurricane damage.
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The before/after pics in Asheville were horrid. I know Ashville is large, but I remember you went to church there, so it can’t be all that far away.
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It takes 45 minutes to get to the church.
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Okay … I knew you had a bit of a drive, but didn’t realize it was that far. Happily, 45 minutes away kept you from devastation.
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I think we have our own devastation in Waynesville. My son, from Washington, said I am cut off. The interstate to Tennessee will be out for weeks. We’ll need to get gas and food from the East. I’ll have to wait for them to bring it here. There is talk of air lifting food to Asheville.
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Oh my – I am on Twitter/(X) and Asheville has been featured as a trending topic for three days now with videos and photos. I just saw more photos a few minutes ago. That’s just amazing airlifting food.
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I’ve been thinking about you and wondering if you got through it in good shape. Thanks for letting us know that Helene’s fury didn’t reach you.
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I haven’t been more than half a mile from home since the hurricane, so I haven’t seen any damage yet. It’s there!
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So glad you “weathered” the storm. Also glad that we don’t have any skunks around here!!
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We smell skunks often on our street. This is the first time one has sprayed a person.
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Glad you are safe Anne.
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Never experienced a hurricane. Nice video clips shoot. Iam so glad you are safe .
How & what skunks?
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A skunk is a small wild animal that defends itself by spraying an awful smelling liquid.
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I can search google. It a cat-sized American mammal of the weasel family, with distinctive black-and-white striped fur. When threatened it squirts a fine spray of foul-smelling irritant liquid from its anal glands towards its attacker.
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You got it!
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Yes, Anne!
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So thankful to read you were safe throughout the storm and that David arrived at work without incident🙏🏻.
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I have now seen some photos of the devastation. It’s heartbreaking.
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That sounds terrible. I haven’t watched much news yet this weekend but I’ll take a look today. I’m so sorry for your community.
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I just went to my Asheville church on line, and no one was there. Chatted with the tech person and another worshipper from Mississippi. They didn’t know if there was church in person today. The damage is much worse than I thought. I haven’t been away from home to see it and will stay out of everyone’s way.
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Wow, no one being there tells you everything. Thinking of all your community🙏🏻.
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Thank you. I just didn’t realize the extent of the storm damage.
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I’m glad to hear you are safe. I’ve been seeing the reports of how bad things are and praying for people in your area.
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Thank you very much. I’ll forward those prayers to God, who knows who needs them. I’m extremely thankful for my safety and am becoming more so when hearing how terrible the storm was.
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what a predicament ! Spooked dog-skunk and grandson out in a hurricane!
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David did let me know he got to work safely, and the storm was over when he came back.
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I am relieved you made it safely through the hurricane. My cell service was terrible at the farm, so I wasn’t able to see if you had any damage.
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We had no damage in our neighborhood at all. I didn’t realize how devastating it was in Waynesville and Asheville until I looked at some online videos today. It was sobering.
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I wondered how you were doing and am glad to see not too bad at all. Your videos look like they could have been taken here on Friday. We had about the same wind/rain with no real damage.
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I’m glad you didn’t have much damage. My neighbors and I are fine, but there is much devastation just a few miles away.
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