Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
International

Hurricane Erin's massive waves threaten to isolate North Carolina's Outer Banks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2025 10:12 AM
  • Hurricane Erin's massive waves threaten to isolate North Carolina's Outer Banks

There's a popular T-shirt on Hatteras Island along the North Carolina Outer Banks that says: “One road on. One road off (sometimes)” — poking fun at the constant battle between Mother Nature and a thin ribbon of pavement connecting the narrow barrier island to the rest of the world.


Mother Nature is probably going to win this week. Hurricane Erin is forecast to stay hundreds of miles offshore but is still sending waves 20 feet (6 meters) or greater crashing over vulnerable sand dunes on the islands.


Officials have ordered evacuations of Hatteras and Ocracoke islands even without a hurricane warning because that tiny ribbon of highway called N.C. 12 will likely be torn up and washed out in several places, isolating villages for days or weeks.


The 3,500 or so Outer Bankers who live there have handled isolation before. But most of the tens of thousands of vacationers have not.


“We haven't seen waves of that size in a while and the vulnerable spots have only gotten weaker in the past five years,” said Reide Corbett, executive director of the Coastal Studies Institute, a group of several universities that study the Outer Banks.


The Outer Banks are defined by water


In a basic sense, they are sand dunes that were tall enough to stay above the ocean level when many of the Earth's glaciers melted 20,000 years ago.


The barrier islands in some places are as far as 30 miles (48 kilometers) off mainland North Carolina. To the east is the vast Atlantic Ocean. To the west is the Pamlico Sound.
“Water, water everywhere. That really resonates on the Outer Banks,” Corbett said.


The most built-up and populated part of the Outer Banks are in the north around Nags Head and Kill Devil Hills, which aren't under the evacuation order. South of the Oregon Inlet, scoured out by a 1846 hurricane, is Hatteras Island, where the only connection to the mainland is N.C. 12. South of there is Ocracoke Island, accessible only by boat or plane.


The first highways to reach the area were built more than 60 years ago. And the Outer Banks started booming, as it went from quaint fishing villages to what it is now, dotted with 6,000-square-foot (550-square-meter) vacation homes on stilts.


Maintaining the highway is arduous


On a nice day, what look like snowplows and street sweeper brushes wait on the side of N.C. 12 to scoop and sweep away the constantly blowing sand.


When the storms come, water from the ocean or the sound punch through the sand dunes and wash tons of sand and debris on the road. In more extreme cases, storms can break up the pavement or even create new inlets that require temporary bridges.


The N.C. Department of Transportation spent more than $1 million a year on regular maintenance to keep N.C. 12 open during the 2010s. It also spent about $50 million over the decade on repairs after storms.


But the state estimates Dare County, which includes most of the Outer Banks, brings in $2 billion in tourism revenue a year. So the cycle of clean up and repair continues.


The repairs take time. Hurricane Isabel in 2003 and Hurricane Irene in 2011 both cut inlets into Hatteras Island and ferries were needed for two months. It can still take days to reopen N.C. 12 after more routine Nor'easters.


The erosion is constant


It's not just storms that impact the island. As the planet warms and polar ice melts, rising ocean levels threaten the Outer Banks. In a place where most of the land is only a few feet above sea level, every inch of sand counts.


In the town of Rodanthe, which sticks the farthest out into the Atlantic, the churning ocean has swallowed up more than a dozen homes since 2020. Officials think at least two unoccupied houses are likely to be lost if the waves from Erin are as strong as predicted. 


The Outer Banks are still home


Shelli Miller Gates waited tables on the Outer Banks to earn money as a college student in the late 1970s. She remembers houses with no air conditioning, televisions or phones. And she adored it.


“I love the water. I love the wildness of it. It’s the way I want to live my life," the respiratory therapist said.


It's a lifestyle embraced by many. The area's shorthand “OBX” shows up in many places as a source of pride, including the first three letters on license plates issued by the state.


The isolation contributes to a sense of community. Gates has seen people band together countless times when their connection to the outside world is severed. And there is always the allure of getting to live someplace where others just get to visit.


“There’s things everywhere. There’s earthquakes and blizzards and floods. Look at the poor people out in western North Carolina,” Gates said. “There are so many things that can happen to you. I feel like you have to find the place that feels like home.”

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Ruth Fremson, File

 

MORE International ARTICLES

Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal reiterates call for Gaza ceasefire

Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal reiterates call for Gaza ceasefire
Jayapal is among the Indian-American lawmakers who have consistently called for a cessation of hostilities, extended truce for smooth flow of aid, swift release of hostages, removal of Hamas and a lasting solution to the raging war in Gaza. Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera has said that there was a :need an immediate pause in order to get needed humanitarian aid, food, water and medicine to struggling civilians; then we need to find a different path forward".

Indian-American Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal reiterates call for Gaza ceasefire

Indian-origin man pleads guilty to firebombing building in US

Indian-origin man pleads guilty to firebombing building in US
A 29-year-old Indian-origin man has pleaded guilty to firebombing an office building in the US state of Wisconsin in May 2022. Hridindu Sankar Roychowdhury, who was arrested from the Boston International Airport this year, was charged with one count of attempting to cause damage by means of fire or an explosive.  

Indian-origin man pleads guilty to firebombing building in US

Teens attack elderly Sikh in UK leaving him with broken ribs

Teens attack elderly Sikh in UK leaving him with broken ribs
A 58-year-old Sikh man was kicked, pulled to the ground and an attempt was made to grab his beard in a hate crime incident by a group of teenage boys in a town in south east England. Inderjit Singh was walking through Langley Memorial Park in Slough when he was approached by a group of young boys on November 21 at around 7 pm.  

Teens attack elderly Sikh in UK leaving him with broken ribs

Kamala Harris on way to Dubai to attend Climate summit COP 28

Kamala Harris on way to Dubai to attend Climate summit COP 28
US Vice-President Kamala Harris will be the highest ranking executive of the US government attending the COP 28 summit in Dubai in the absence of President Joe Biden said to be busy with the war in Ukraine and Israel–Hamas conflict as well as hostage negotiations. Harris is expected to reach Dubai later on Friday after a pushback over President Biden skipping the opening of the gathering this week amid heavy criticism from climate summit nations.

Kamala Harris on way to Dubai to attend Climate summit COP 28

Over 100 killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza since truce expired: Hamas

Over 100 killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza since truce expired: Hamas
Ministry spokesperson Ashraf al-Qedra said in a press statement that "about 109 Palestinians, mostly women and children, were killed by the Israeli airstrikes in the Strip", Xinhua news agency reported. According to al-Qedra, two Palestinian journalists were among the victims.

Over 100 killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza since truce expired: Hamas

Australian Sikh turns to social media to report death threat, verbal abuses

Australian Sikh turns to social media to report death threat, verbal abuses
Questioning police response, a Melbourne-based Sikh shopkeeper turned to social media claiming he has been subjected to verbal abuses and a death threat, leaving him fearing for his life, a media report said. Charanvir Singh, who runs a newspaper and lottery shop in Avondale Heights, north-west of Melbourne, told SBS Punjabi news channel that the ordeal began when he denied service to a customer who failed to provide a valid ID matching a parcel's details.

Australian Sikh turns to social media to report death threat, verbal abuses