Storm Surge

By Hugh Nevin

Preface: This is the harrowing story of one man trapped outside during Hurricane Ian. He is a friend of the family and many people I know. His will to live shows fortitude and strength. Although long, it is an amazing story!

STORM SURGE

Get your motor runnin’
Head out on the highway
Lookin’ for adventure
And whatever comes our way


I decided to commit my memories of September 28, 2022 to writing for two reasons. First, I was understandably and repeatedly asked what happened, and it grew time consuming to repeat the story. Secondly, I needed to exorcise my mind of the devils and the repeated visuals and decisions made that day.

Eliza and I live in Barefoot Beach, part of Bonita Springs, Florida. Our power went out around 9AM on Wednesday, September 28. We had heard that there was power in the clubhouse which was across the parking lot from us, and I could see lights on, so we thought we might try to go over there and charge phones and use hot water. We went down the stairwell from the sixth floor at 11:10 AM; the elevator was out. At the bottom it was hard to open the door as the water was already rushing in from the garage. We had seen from above that the waves had breached the beach, the mangrove and sea grape forests, and was flowing into the garage. We wanted to see if we could get across the parking lot, but Eliza decided to return and went upstairs.

I walked through our garage to the entrance, but I could tell that the waves were too high to cross the parking lot. So I returned to the stairway door, and it was locked. Eliza had gone back up. I had no key. The elevator was out. I was stuck. I thought Eliza would eventually realize I don’t have a key (because I had foolishly forgotten it before) and would come down, so I found a perch in the entrance way, sat 4 feet up from the floor and watched the waves come pounding across the beach, across the sand dunes, into and through the garage, past me and out the other side onto the road. The waves grew larger, and I watched a handrail as a marker for the amount of water in the building. Several times I left my perch and made my way around the back of the building where there was little wind to see if I could do a quick scoot across to the clubhouse, but I saw each time that this was impossible. So I returned to my perch, but eventually the water was up to my four foot perch, the waves were splashing me in the face, and I realized that if I stayed there, I would drown. I also assumed now that Eliza thought I had safely made it across the parking place to the clubhouse and was enjoying a hot tea.

So I followed the water rushing out the door, hung on to the gate, and considered my alternatives. Eventually the wind got me and blew me across the Barefoot Beach Boulevard into the mangrove forest. The force of it was incredible. I was lifted up and thrown like a ragdoll. As I got over to the other side, I clung to a tree and noticed that large projectiles, including tables, chairs, paddle boards, and kayaks were flying through the air hitting the trees and breaking in half; and I realized if one of them hit me, I would not survive the collision. So I let the water and the wind drive me further into the mangroves which protected me from the projectiles. As I got further in, I started to find assorted objects, including chairs, benches, paddle boards and finally a submerged red kayak that I could sit in. I thought I might stay there, but it kept tipping. I looked around and saw a large green object that appeared to be another strangely shaped kayak, so I abandoned the red kayak, and swam over to what turned out to be a capsized kayak belonging to one of my neighbors, Jon Fay on the 4th floor of our building. It had a large draft, so it was difficult to clamber up on top of it. One of my own paddles came flying by, and I grabbed it and was able to paddle.

I assumed that if I paddled through this mangrove forest I would come to the bay behind our building and then, with the wind coming from south to north, be driven over towards the Bonita Beach Road, and there might be people who would have telephones and help me. I was finally able to exit the mangrove forest into the bay mostly by pulling forward with trees on each side. But when I got there, I found it was a false bay and everything was piled up at the end. So I made my way across this short bay on my overturned kayak with my broken paddle and got into the next mangrove forest through which I believed I could go to get to the next bay. But once into the next mangrove forest my upside down kayak kept snagging on roots and branches and wouldn’t move forward. The kayak had a seat with a high seatback and a pedal mechanism which was down, and roots were getting stuck on it, and I could not move forward. To make any progress, I realized I had to get off the boat, which I did not want to do because it was hard to get on. And I certainly didn’t want to get into the water with alligators and snakes (I kept thinking water moccasins), but I decided I had to. So I got off and went under the boat, detached the snags, got back on, and made a little progress. Then same problem again. I got off the kayak, detached the snags, got back on again. I was getting exhausted doing this. I was making almost no progress, and I couldn’t quite break through to the bay on the other side. I realized I needed to overturn the kayak so the seat and paddle mechanism would no longer snag the kayak. So I got in the water and, of course, I had no purchase because the water was over 10 feet deep, (I dove down to investigate), and the kayak was a large one, 100 pounds Jon Fay later told me. I kept lifting, and I could get it up a little bit, but I couldn’t get it up much more than that. And then I found a branch not far from the boat, so I shoved the boat over and climbed on the branch. I tried 10 or 15 times without success. Then I noticed that if I moved the boat perpendicular to the wind, the wind could help me. And so I waited for a strong gust and heaved up the boat and turned it over. I thought my problems were now solved. I had a paddle, I had an upright kayak with no water in it, but then I had to get into to it, and it had very high gunnels, and it was very difficult to get in. Each time I threw a leg up and over, the boat would start to tip, and I was afraid the boat would tip over again on top of me. But eventually I was able to get up in it, and I had my paddle, so I paddled back into an open area and decided I would paddle against the wind around the mangrove forest, rather than through it, and then take the wind and current to the Bonita Beach Road. I hadn’t gone far before a harsh gust tipped me over, and I thought oh my gosh I’ve got to do the whole exercise all over again. This time the wind was stronger and it was easier to turn it over, but my paddle was blown away. I got the boat right-sided, clambered in, and retreated back into the mangroves. I was starting to shiver a lot, and I was afraid that I would get hypothermia, so I waited for a while. All the while I kept thinking this cannot be happening; it is simply a bad dream, wake up. This isn’t reality. And then I remembered my basic training where the DIs told us: This is reality, deal with it. It was just starting to get dark. It had been grey all day with heavy winds and biting rain, but now I sensed dusk, and I knew I would not survive a night out in the open.

I noticed that the wind was changing. It was no longer south to north but north to south. I thought that if I got out into the wind and current and got the pedal mechanism working, which I did to a minor extent, disappointingly, the wind would drive me down the bay to the Delnor Wiggins Pass, and there I could get out onto a beach and make my way into the state park and then out into an area where maybe there were some people. I forgot to mention I had lost my shoes early on, so I had no shoes but short pants, a shirt, an L.L. Bean rain jacket, and no hat. The rain was slanting hard and kept blinding me, so I had to maneuver with my eyes slanted.

I finally got the boat out into the bay, and the wind picked me up, taking me in the direction I hoped it would; and as I moved in that direction I noticed that I could see for the first time the outline of condominium buildings near us which I had not been able to see before because of the wind, rain, and darkness. These were condominium buildings further south from the one in which we live. And I remembered at Building 9 there was a kayak launch, and if I could get the boat over to the kayak launch, I could get out on dry land (I hadn’t felt dry land for seven hours), and go home. So I got as close as I could. The peddle mechanism worked somewhat but not enough, and the rudder was stuck in the wrong position. But I eventually maneuvered the boat into the first line of mangroves, abandoned ship, and swam over to the building. I remember the joy in suddenly seeing the building and the concrete foundation under the mangroves as I made my way through the mangroves. I clambered out into the garage, walked through the garage, came out from the building and got thrown over again by the wind. I made my way across their parking lot to the Barefoot Beach Boulevard, tripping on displaced concrete and bricks, and falling from wind gusts. I then swam, and walked up the boulevard from Building 9 to our Building 3. I could see there were lights flashing at our building, and I assumed it was the police and fire department who were out looking for me and they would have warm blankets and hot chocolate. But that was not the case. Something had triggered the fire alarm for the building. I got to our building and made my way over to the stairway. Fortunately, the stairway door which had locked me out in the first place had been blown away, so I could walk up the stairway. It was totally dark. I had no flashlight, but I made it up six floors counting, got to the door which leads to the corridor which leads to our apartment, and it was locked. I could not believe my bad luck. I walked down to the fourth floor where our neighbors, Jon and Elissa Fay, who had stayed through the hurricane, lived, and tried their door; but it was locked. I felt my way down to the bottom floor thinking that I’ll go over to the clubhouse and seek shelter there if I am able to get there. Then I heard a voice and saw a light. It was my friend, Jon Fay, whose kayak had saved me. He had come down to the bottom floor. I approached him, and he suggested we go over to the clubhouse as the waves had diminished. So I volunteered to go first as I now had experience in tripping through buried concrete remnants. I tried, but I kept tripping and getting blown over; and then I felt the storm surge had created a large chasm, and we couldn’t cross it. Jon had caught up to me, and we decided to go back. It suddenly occurred to my addled brain that if he was there, he must be able to get through the door to the corridor and then to his unit. So I said that if the doors were locked, how did you do this, and he said the stairwell doors were not locked, it’s air rushing up the stairwell and creating a wind tunnel effect; but if you push down the handle and push your shoulder into the door, you’ll be able to get in. We went up to his floor and he showed me. By then he could see that I was in shock, so he gently with a flash light guided me up to the next two floors to our floor. We opened the door and got to the corridor, went over to the door, and I saw a sign on the door; and I thought, oh my gosh Eliza has left a sign saying she’s abandoned the condo and gone somewhere, but it only said that she was in the bathroom because the fire alarm was making such a racket. We opened the door, and she looked at me in shock and astonishment and rushed forward and took me in a love embrace. I must have looked like an apparition. The nine hours of loss were written on her face.

She stripped me of my clothes and wrapped me up in warm blankets and put me in bed. I shivered uncontrollably for about an hour and a half. Elissa Fay from the fourth floor brought up some lemon sugar water. She said if you’re in shock, you need to sugar. It was only as I was getting undressed that I realized that I was cut all over my body, bleeding and badly bruised from all the collisions with trees and branches. I also had a scary something in my left eye that hurt. I couldn’t sleep that night because I kept dreaming of my trip and trying to re-think the decisions I made. But the next morning I felt better, but my muscles ached in a horrible way. I couldn’t sit up without help, and I couldn’t elevate my legs without help. Those muscles, which served me so well, were kaput. It was a miracle and God’s help that brought me home. The final miracle was that I came back at precisely the right time to meet Jon Fay on the ground floor with a flash light. He was a guardian angel. He told me I could open the stairway door to the 6th floor and led me there. If he comes out 10 minutes earlier or 10 minutes later, I had no more alternatives.


Storm Footage

This video was sent to my friend who has a place in Old Naples, which is down the shore from Barefoot Beach. My friend wasn’t in Florida at the time, however this video shows 5th Avenue in Old Naples after the water had receded some; it is normally a road. The video may help give you a sense of the storm Hugh had to endure.

Hugh saw this footage after I published his story; this is what he said: “The video is tame. The waves which swept me away were over 7 feet high, nothing flat and placid. The winds and waves were far more ferocious. This video looks like the aftermath of the storm.”

-Sarah