Current:Home > InvestHorseshoe Beach hell: Idalia's wrath leaves tiny Florida town's homes, history in ruins -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Horseshoe Beach hell: Idalia's wrath leaves tiny Florida town's homes, history in ruins
View
Date:2025-04-20 03:58:56
HORSESHOE BEACH, Fla. − Herman “Pork Chop” Neeley thought he could hunker down in his seaside home and make it through Hurricane Idalia. Then he saw the storm surge.
Neeley, 78, heard his house rattling just after dawn Wednesday morning. He had just begun to sense the force of the hurricane smashing through Florida's Big Bend area and his hometown of Horseshoe Beach, population 169 as of the 2010 census.
He opened his front door and saw the warm Gulf of Mexico water rushing toward him. By the time he got his socks and boots on, it was up to his knees.
“I told myself ‘It’s time for you to go now,’” he said. “'Get the hell out of Dodge.'”
Neeley was one of more than a dozen Horseshoe Beach locals whose homes were totaled − in his case, a seafoam green rancher his father built in 1962.
He and others who spoke to USA TODAY said they had never seen such a storm rip through their secluded town on the Gulf − not Hurricane Hermine in 2016, and not the great “no-name storm” in 1993.
“It was nothing you could imagine,” Neeley said after describing a narrow escape in his Chevy Silverado truck as the wind and storm surge toppled power lines. After the worst of it passed, he went back to find his house knocked off its blocks and the interior destroyed.
Many of his neighbors say homes that were still standing after Hurricane Hermine were destroyed by Idalia.
“Pretty much everything that’s left standing was already rebuilt,” said John Neal, who owns a landscaping business on Horseshoe Beach. “They’re not family homes that have been here for generations.”
He and his wife, Carla Neal, had to tell 10 of their friends that they had lost everything.
“It’s tough to call people and tell them their house is gone,” John Neal said. “It’s terrible, actually.”
The couple and their three kids, ages 7 to 14, helped clean up the hollowed building that, a day earlier, was a popular marina run by Dennis Buckley, a local landowner the pair call “Grampy B.”
The storm destroyed four houses Buckley owned and rented, as well as a marina and a hotel, the Angler's Inn. His only house still standing after the hurricane was the one he lives in with his wife just behind the marina.
The marina had a small pub attached to it, Jake’s Bar. It was named after a Labrador retriever that Buckley and his wife had to put down months before they reopened the shop, which had been closed for years.
On Thursday, antique soda machines, bicycles and rotary phones, which had decorated the marina, lie mangled with chunks of metal and tree limbs. Debris had been hurled hundreds of feet away.
In the muck, Carla Neal found her great-grandfather’s fishing pole that used to hang over the door of the shop.
“We need to keep this,” she said as she handed it to her 12-year-old son, Ethan. “There’s not much else here.”
Neeley, whose nickname "Pork Chop" comes from his plump childhood, said he knew his house was a total loss. But when he got back to see it, he was astounded at the damage.
“Look, see how it moved the freezer and the washer-dryer?” Neeley said, pointing to each item. “How’d it do that? It blew the walls out.”
The interior and exterior of the home was streaked with mud that leveled off in an almost straight line.
“It’s at least 5 feet high,” Neeley said, holding his hand straight across his chest, demonstrating the height of the surge. “I almost didn’t make it.”
On the white wall just beside the front door read a note scrawled in black magic marker: “SEPT. 1, 2016 Hurricane Hermine.” Next to it was a straight line across and an arrow pointing to it.
“See that?” Neeley said. “Now this one yesterday killed my house.”
Neeley makes his living installing roofs and fixing boats. He learned his way around a boat engine from his father, a commercial trout fisherman. Neeley, along with his seven siblings, grew up on the same street he still lives on.
“I know everybody and everybody knows me,” he said.
Neeley didn't hesitate when asked about his plans for the future: "I’m going to get me a trailer … get everything cleaned up. And then I’m going to start to build me a house.”
Just then, two men in a Red Cross van stopped in front of the house.
“You hungry?” one man said. “Want any food?”
“I’m all right,” Neeley said. “Got any beer or whiskey?”
Contact Christopher Cann by email at ccann@gannett.com or follow him on X @ChrisCannFL.
veryGood! (65283)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Historic landmarks eyed for demolition get boost from Hollywood A-listers
- US announces sweeping action against Chinese fentanyl supply chain producers
- Capitol Police investigating Jamaal Bowman's pulling of fire alarm ahead of shutdown vote
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Jimmy Fallon Perfectly Sums Up What Happened During 5-Month Late-Night Hiatus: Taylor Swift
- Show them the medals! US women could rake in hardware at world gymnastics championships
- Schumer to lead a bipartisan delegation of senators to China, South Korea and Japan next week
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Nevada governor files lawsuit challenging ethics censure, fine over use of badge on campaign trail
Ranking
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Giants' season is already spiraling out of control after latest embarrassment in prime time
- Travis Kelce's Mom Donna Has the Ultimate Take on Taylor Swift's Seemingly Ranch Photo
- Jimmy Butler shows off 'emo' hairstyle, predicts Heat will win NBA Finals in 2023
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- 2 workers conducting polls for Mexico’s ruling party killed, 1 kidnapped in southern Mexico
- Opening statements to begin in Washington officers’ trial in deadly arrest of Black man Manuel Ellis
- NFL Week 4 winners, losers: Bengals in bad place with QB Joe Burrow
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Juvenile shoots, injures 2 children following altercation at Pop Warner football practice in Florida
Michigan moves past Georgia for No. 1 spot in college football's NCAA Re-Rank 1-133
Jennifer Lopez Ditches Her Signature Nude Lip for an Unexpected Color
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Kidnapping suspect who left ransom note also gave police a clue — his fingerprints
Judge says freestanding birth centers in Alabama can remain open, despite ‘de facto ban’
Jennifer Lopez Ditches Her Signature Nude Lip for an Unexpected Color