The Star Malaysia

Going with the Flo

US coastal town in North Carolina braces for Hurricane Florence.

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WRIGHTSVIL­LE BEACH ( North Carolina): Wooden planks boarding up windows, sandbags lining the edge of the placid-for-now ocean: locals of one seaside resort in North Carolina are maintainin­g relative calm as they gird for Hurricane Florence – an attitude somewhat masking their anxiety, as the potentiall­y catastroph­ic storm closes in on them.

As skies fluctuated on Tuesday between heavy showers and occasional bright spots, a certain sunny outlook swaddled Wrightsvil­le Beach, despite the looming arrival of Florence’s heavy winds and inundating rains that has prompted widespread evacuation­s along the southeaste­rn US coast.

Kevin Goricki, 29, who came to visit the normally idyllic area, still intends to enjoy the beach with his family.

He said he already went through 2011’s Hurricane Irene, and cited flooding as the worst threat.

He doesn’t fear for his family’s safety, though, saying they will hunker down at his sister’s third-floor home.

“I must confess I like the atmosphere around it,” he said, looking

out over the Atlantic.

But others are more wary: Mexican restaurant Tower Seven has closed and barricaded its doors to customers since Tuesday, hanging a sign on the door warning people to “be safe.”

Jim Wenning, a regular there, arrived at the scene to help the boss try “to avoid additional damage.”

“We haven’t see a storm like this since the 1950s,” said the constructi­on worker, drill in hand.

“It could be chaotic around here for a week or so.”

He lives a bit further inland, and has yet to decide whether he will evacuate.

“I’ll leave if the winds are still above 130 mph (209 kph), because my house hasn’t been built to resist more,” he said.

“I’ll make a last minute decision.” But Greg Cook and his girlfriend, who have called Wrightsvil­le Beach home for seven years, chose to move everything – mattresses, lamps, dressers, a grill – before Florence’s arrival.

“We’ve already been flooded three times, but it should be a completely different story this time around,” he said.

“People usually say ‘it’s okay, the hurricane will turn North, we’ll be fine.’

“But this time everybody thinks it will really happen – and that it will be bad.”

Those intending to leave face a race against the clock to flee the island town just east of the port city Wilmington, as drawbridge access to it will be raised Wednesday evening.

Water and electricit­y will also be cut – but even that’s not enough to deter some from staying at all costs.

“Our neighbour thinks he’s safe on the first floor,” Cook said.

“We are leaving him our generator, but I don’t think it’s particular­ly smart of him.” —

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 ?? Reuters ?? Calm before the hurricane: Sailors casting off mooring lines to the Command hospital ship ‘USNS Comfort’ as the ship evacuates Naval Station Norfolk in preparatio­n for Hurricane Florence in Norfolk, Virginia. —
Reuters Calm before the hurricane: Sailors casting off mooring lines to the Command hospital ship ‘USNS Comfort’ as the ship evacuates Naval Station Norfolk in preparatio­n for Hurricane Florence in Norfolk, Virginia. —
 ?? AP ?? Better safe than sorry: A man pulling his boat from a nearby marina to secure it at his home ahead of Hurricane Florence in Morehead City. —
AP Better safe than sorry: A man pulling his boat from a nearby marina to secure it at his home ahead of Hurricane Florence in Morehead City. —

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