Los Angeles Times

At hotel, North Carolina residents weather the storm and bouts of boredom.

After signing liability waiver, N.C. residents hunker down at hotel with supplies, board games and spare time.

- By Jenny Jarvie jenny.jarvie@latimes.com Twitter: @jennyjarvi­e

WILMINGTON, N.C. — Long before the rain and the wind reached the Country Inn & Suites in this North Carolina port city, couples and families began to pour in.

Some walked German shepherds and Labradors on leashes. Others carried essential supplies to weather the storm: giant jugs of water and Yeti coolers, crates of canned food and Xboxes, oxygen tanks and electric griddles.

Most were locals who lived in mobile homes, low apartments or one-story homes — structures that might not withstand heavy wind or flood damage when Hurricane Florence finally hit. The massive storm carried hurricane-force winds reaching up to 80 miles from its center.

Not that there was any guarantee they would be safe here.

At check in, staff at this modest four-story hotel in north Wilmington asked everyone to sign a liability waiver.

Thursday morning, a sheet of paper was slipped under every door.

“Please be advised that Country Inn & Suites… is NOT a designated hurricane shelter,” the note from management said, warning they could lose power and did not have a backup generator.

Jay Patel, the affable owner of the hotel, had considered shutting down ahead of the storm, but a lot of guests had already made reservatio­ns.

“Where would all these people go?” he said as he gestured at a middle-aged couple who walked into the breakfast room Thursday evening for a bowl of cereal. “If I shut the building, 75 families would be without shelter.”

Many guests were storm veterans, folks who had hunkered down in hotels before to wait out a hurricane.

As they unpacked, they worried about the homes and neighbors they left behind. But as the hours dragged on, and the gentle breeze and light drizzle picked up, the main concern was how to relieve the tedium.

Strangers randomly thrown together, some chatted to their fellow guests.

But most holed up inside their rooms watching weather reports. A few played video games or busied themselves with laundry. Others filled out crosswords, watched YouTube videos or smoked cigarettes outside the reception area.

“I’m anxious to get it over with,” Teresa Parsley, a 64year-old retired mail carrier, said as she sat in a lounge chair in the lobby clutching a paperback copy of Sandra Brown’s “White Hot.” “You can’t sit in a hotel room for days and days without going crazy.”

Parsley, who was sharing a suite with her son, daughter-in-law, three grandchild­ren and dog, had come from Hampstead, a small town about 13 miles northeast, fearful the road to her house might wash out.

Her son, Jeff, a 39-yearold constructi­on worker, tried to keep the kids occupied, playing bocce ball on a thin strip of grass outside the hotel lobby and opening up board games like “Sorry!” and “Trouble.”

“I’m bored,” said his 16year-old daughter, Megan, her painted pink fingernail­s darting across her cellphone as she exchanged messages with friends who had evacuated to Indiana and New York.

Others were more in the mood for a party.

Up in room 314, Jose Ramos, a 44-year-old landscaper, beamed as he set up an electric griddle on a wooden desk and heated up corn tortillas and hot dogs.

His extended family of 11 had the TV turned on to a local weather channel, but they hardly looked at the screen as they squeezed around a bowl of fresh homemade salsa and snacked on “Mexican hot dogs” and chicken tinga.

“We eat and we drink!” Jose’s wife, Janie Ramos, a 48-year-old teacher, said cheerily. “By the time you notice, the hurricane is gone!”

Some guests vowed to stay up as long as they could, looking out their windows into the darkness as the rain lashed the building and the wind whipped the trees. But in the end, most slept through the night.

At 6:45 a.m., Marc Colson, 18, stumbled down to the breakfast room and was just about to press the button on the waffle machine when the power went out.

About a dozen people in the dark room stared out the window as the wind howled and the pine trees wobbled frenetical­ly.

Outside, the sky was blank and gray. Tree limbs littered the driveway, and the lower parking lot began to clog with leaves and fill with water.

Over the next few hours, the wind picked up power, knocking pine trees onto the grass, pummeling awnings across the parking lot, and ripping the hotel’s U.S. flag off its metal pole.

Eventually, the eye of the hurricane passed right by, narrowly missing Wilmington as it moved southwest.

“So far, so good,” the general manager, Nisarg Patel, said as he walked into the lobby before noon.

The wind still roared and the rain still drizzled. But many of the guests were happily camped out, hunched over cellphones, chatting with loved ones, chuckling over board games.

 ?? Robert Gourley For The Times ?? THE RAMOS family waits out the storm Thursday in Wilmington, N.C. “I feel like I’ve prayed enough. Everything is in God’s hands,” mother Janie Ramos said.
Robert Gourley For The Times THE RAMOS family waits out the storm Thursday in Wilmington, N.C. “I feel like I’ve prayed enough. Everything is in God’s hands,” mother Janie Ramos said.

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