Current:Home > MarketsAmerican Climate Video: The Driftwood Inn Had an ‘Old Florida’ Feel, Until it Was Gone -RiskWatch
American Climate Video: The Driftwood Inn Had an ‘Old Florida’ Feel, Until it Was Gone
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:32:11
The 20th of 21 stories from the American Climate Project, an InsideClimate News documentary series by videographer Anna Belle Peevey and reporter Neela Banerjee.
MEXICO BEACH, Florida—For 45 years, Shawna Wood celebrated Christmas at the Driftwood Inn, owned by her parents, Peggy and Tom Wood, on the beach in this Gulf Coast town.
But on Christmas Day 2018, two months after Hurricane Michael, the Wood family celebrated in Atlanta, because the Driftwood Inn had been destroyed.
“The whole family comes here [to Mexico Beach],” Peggy said. But in 2018, she said, “We had no place to go. So we all had to go to Atlanta. And Shawna cried the whole week we were there.”
“It was miserable,” Shawna said.
Peggy lived in the inn and Shawna grew up on the beach. Frequent guests at the Driftwood became like grandparents to Shawna and her siblings—some even attended their graduations.
“It was a small town and you became part of a small extended family when you lived here,” Peggy said. “Everybody here looks out for everyone else; it’s just a wonderful little town to live in.”
But after Hurricane Michael struck Mexico Beach on Oct. 10, 2018, nothing was the same.
The storm quickly accelerated from a Category 1 hurricane to a Category 4 over the course of two days, giving residents little time to evacuate. By the time it made landfall, Michael was a Category 5, with sustained winds of over 160 mph.
“We didn’t anticipate it getting so strong so fast,” Shawna said. “I mean, we’ve never seen anything like this before. We’ve been through 45 years of hurricanes.”
The hurricane was the first Category 5 to hit the Florida Panhandle, but as the climate warms, scientists warn that more Category 4 and 5 storms will make landfall in the United States, fueled by hotter ocean waters.
After the storm, the Wood family returned to Mexico Beach to survey the damage to their inn. They had to use a GPS to navigate their way home, despite living in the town for decades, because all the familiar landmarks were gone. Their town was unrecognizable.
When they arrived at the Driftwood, the front of the building looked OK. The structure was still standing and mostly intact.
“It wasn’t until we went around back when we realized that it had gutted the place,” Shawna said.
Peggy wishes she could rebuild the Driftwood to look exactly the way it was before. The inn had a sense of “old Florida,” she said, where guests could walk out onto the beach directly from their rooms. But to avoid destruction by another hurricane, the new Driftwood Inn will be built 10 feet higher.
Still, there was a sense of the way things were before when Shawna and Peggy stood on the beach, looking at the ocean toward the horizon with the Driftwood at their backs. Here, they can almost imagine that everything was normal and nothing had changed.
“I don’t know if the sunsets have changed and gotten brighter, or if I just didn’t notice them before,” Shawna said. “Because of all the rest of the beauty, the only thing we have left is sunset.”
veryGood! (55)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Afghan Embassy closes in India citing a lack of diplomatic support and personnel
- Women’s voices and votes loom large as pope opens Vatican meeting on church’s future
- How researchers are using AI to save rainforest species
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Grant program for Black women entrepreneurs blocked by federal appeals court
- Yemen’s state-run airline suspends the only route out of Sanaa over Houthi restrictions on its funds
- AL West title, playoff seeds, saying goodbye: What to watch on MLB's final day of season
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- It's only fitting Ukraine gets something that would have belonged to Russia
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Yemen’s state-run airline suspends the only route out of Sanaa over Houthi restrictions on its funds
- Horoscopes Today, September 30, 2023
- The Hollywood writers strike is over, but the actors strike could drag on. Here's why
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- A California professor's pronoun policy went viral. A bomb threat followed.
- A fight over precious groundwater in a rural California town is rooted in carrots
- Young Evangelicals fight climate change from inside the church: We can solve this crisis in multiple ways
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Shopping for Barbie at the airport? Hot Wheels on a cruise ship? Toys R Us has got you
A populist ex-premier who opposes support for Ukraine leads his leftist party to victory in Slovakia
NYC flooding updates: Sewers can't handle torrential rain; city reels after snarled travel
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Tim Wakefield, Red Sox World Series Champion Pitcher, Dead at 57
Tropical Storm Philippe a threat for flash floods overnight in Leeward Islands, forecasters say
Kansas police chief suspended in wake of police raid on local newspaper