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Month: October 2024

Wednesday After Helene

There was more progress in the neighborhood today: the two trees blocking our road no longer are, and more importantly, the power up the street (due to the downed lines of those two trees) has been restored.

"Has been restored" -- the most pathetic use of passive voice ever. Linesmen restored it. Men who are working twelve to fourteen hours every day to bring power back to the millions in the south who lost it.

We should all find one linesman and buy him dinner when this is all over. Each linesman would get dozens of evenings out. Probably hundreds. And we still wouldn't have repaid them.

On our property, I worked today to remove the dam of debris that formed in our backyard creek. It was about five feet high and seemed like it would completely block the water the next time we had a heavy rain -- so it had to go. I'll finish it up tomorrow.

And in the evening, soccer practice and a walk around the fields. Surprisingly little damage there: almost no trees down at all.

One Good Thing from Helene

Tuesday After the Storm

Our street has been blocked since Friday morning when Helene took down the tree I'd expected to fall for at least five years.

"When are they going to take care of that?" L asked. "When are they going to get rid of that tree," E asked. The answer was simple, like so many things in Helene's wake: "I don't know."

We kept reminding them about fortunate we are: we had power back the same day we lost it. We never lost water. We have a home that "flooded" with about two inches of water at most, and in the basement, where we'd already prepared for just that much flooding.

Today, though, the linesmen began working in our neighborhood. They took care of the broken power pole behind our house and cleared the tree blocking our road (though that was the city's work, I guess).

And we decided it was time to do some exploring. We headed back along the creek that we've always called our adventuring area. There was a waterfall there that spilled over some rocks and enormous roots of two trees that towered over everything.

Those two trees, however, were casualties of Helene. Minor casualties, to be sure: they were tall enough to take out a bit of fencing in a backyard on our street, but that's nothing compared to the death toll that's in the Carolinas.

Heading back home, we noticed another change: without the enormous tree that was hanging over our street (and the blocking our street), our street looks a lot different.

It's not the only thing in the south that looks different thanks to Helene.