House on the left in process of collapsing into the ocean on September 24 in Rodanthe, North Carolina It bumped into the house on the right, damaging it and that house is doomed to collapse, too. |
Just a slower motion version of it. Without the actual hurricane.
Neither hurricanes Helene and Milton really affected Rodanthe. But before those two storms, all it took was a routine easterly fetch of wind and waves off the Atlantic Ocean to cause more problems there.
Houses are falling into the water, as you can see in the video in this link, for instance. Also, theres's a couple good news videos of this situation that adds more good context to this post.
According to a September 24 Washington Post piece:
"The latest came early Tuesday afternoon when the ocean claimed an unoccupied house at 23039 G.A. Kohler Ct. It marked the third such home collapse since Friday on this erosion-plagued stretch of the Outer Bans - and the 10th home to fall since 2020.
Rodanthe, home to some the most rapid rates of erosion on the East Coast, has become a poster child in recent years for the perils of living along a vulnerable coastline, particularly in an age of more intense storms and rising seas.
Multiple homeowners in this small community have raced to relocate their homes farther from the shoreline, often at a cost of thousands of dollars. Others have tried to move their homes further from th encroaching tides, only to run out of time."
Three homes fell into the ocean in less than a week. Days before the house described above fell in, yet another one did. That failure caused added damage to a precariously situated house next door to fall into the waves.
The one the Washington Post described in that September 24 article appears to have damaged the one next to it, so that one should go soon if it hasn't already. A nearby red colored house also looks doomed.
Earlier this month, the Board of Commissioners in Dare County, where Rodanthe is located, voted to apply for a FEMA Flood Mitigation Assistance grant. A state project director is reaching out to eligible homeowners to see if they're interested in the voluntary program.
The program targets 20 potential properties in Rodanthe that are in or close to the ocean and within 300 feet of stable vegetation. The whole process takes three or four years, so we're probably going to see more homes fall into the ocean.
Aerial view in Rondanthe, North Carolina taken a couple months ago. Four houses in the foreground have since collapsed into the ocean, |
Which of course is a problem since each collapse causes a huge mess. Debris spreads miles up and down the beach with each collapse, and it all has to be picked up. I'm sure sharp objects like glass shards and nails are left behind, too.
Inches matter with sea level rise. According to a Washington Post article from March, sea levels have risen seven inches in recent decades at Oregon Inlet, near Rodanthe. A stretch along Seagull Street in Rodanthe loses about a dozen feet or more per year to erosion.
I'm also sure there was more erosion on the Outer Banks and elsewhere along the Atlantic Seaboard last week. We just had a full super moon - named because the moon is a little closer to Earth than usual and looks bigger than it normally does,
This super moon contributed to King Tides that caused "sunny weather flooding" along coastlines from New England to Florida. This never used to be a real problem decades ago, but sea level rise has made even just a full moon in calm weather cause coastal flooding.
A nor'easter far off shore probably also contributed to swells that probably added to the erosion late this past week. Video of Buxton, North Carolina, a little south of Rodanthe, showed King Tide waves smashing ashore, causing plenty of flooding and erosion under crystal clear blue skies.
Speaking of nor'easters, even though hurricane season is about to wane, nor'easter season is just ramping up. This will no doubt increase the pressure on homes on North Carolina's Outer Banks, and up and down the East Coast for that matter.
It'll be interesting to see how many more houses and buildings fall into the ocean this winter, especially if it's really stormy out there.
VIDEOS
CBS News video, first aired Wednesday, on the challenges that face North Carolina's Outer Banks, focusing on Rodanthe. Click on this link to view, or if you see the image below, click on that:
Television station WRAL has more on this. Again, click on this link to view, or if you see the image below, click on that.
The OBX are essentially just a big sand bar which is generally being washed away as ocean levels rise and the storms become more significant. Folks who have built houses out there are in varying states of peril, but its a losing game.
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