'They never talk about Everglades': A fishing community versed in struggle bands together after Hurricane Ian
'They never talk about Everglades': A fishing community versed in struggle bands together after Hurricane Ian
Chris KenningEVERGLADES CITY, Florida — On the doorframe of Petra Gengenbach’s 1960s-era Right Choice supermarket, the words “Irma 2017” are scrawled next to a black line. Not far below it, she pointed to the latest waterline left days earlier.
The 55-year-old spent Friday clearing ruined food and mud from her store after Hurricane Ian's storm surge swept through the hardscrabble crab fishing community, the last town before Florida’s southwest coast dissolves into the Everglades and mangrove islands.
While Ian didn’t cause the catastrophic damage seen further north, the surge of seawater tore through the first floors of homes, sparked a fire at a two-generation airboat business and sent neighbors scrambling to rescue each other in jon boats that sped atop a city turned into a lake
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