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A North Carolina couple recounts being swept away on the couch during Hurricane Helene
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A North Carolina couple recounts being swept away on the couch during Hurricane Helene

YANCEY COUNTY, NC – As residents continue the painstaking process of trying to put their lives back together in the wake of Hurricane Helene, a hard-hit western couple North Carolina shares his story of survival.

Howard and Lisa Ray lived in a house near the Cane River, north of Ashevillewhen the hurricane began to dump torrential rains.

“It was probably 9:30 that morning when we looked out and the water was maybe 10 feet away. And then, like, 15 minutes later, we looked outside again, and our porch was gone,” Lisa Ray told FOX Weather.

Minutes later, Lisa said the kitchen began to fill with water, and a couch was one of the last pieces of furniture visible above the waterline.

Howard Ray is a lieutenant in a local fire department. And after calling for help over a radio communication system, Lisa said their trailer tore into pieces, allowing the couple to float away as they clung to the couch.

“I floated on the sofa and he held onto her arm. I floated about 400 meters and he told me to jump,” she said. “And I jumped and wrapped my arm around a (nearby) barbed wire fence.

HELENE CAUSED AT LEAST $53 BILLION IN FEAR IN NORTH CAROLINA, GOVERNOR CALLS

Howard said help finally arrived several hours later, but it was several days before he and his wife returned to their property to survey the damage and look for their missing dog.

“Two days later, she was back where we pulled into the garage to get to our jeep. And there she was. I’d never seen her smile before,” Lisa said.

Ray’s home, along with many in rural Pensacola, North Carolina, was a complete loss as feet of water poured into rivers and tributaries.

The couple is temporarily staying in an Airbnb arranged by their preacher until they decide what to do next.

Conformable data from the Federal Emergency Management Agencynearly every flood-affected property in North Carolina does not have an active flood insurance policy, which will make the recovery process even more extensive.

“Where God leads us is where we’re going to go,” Lisa told FOX Weather.

HELENE’S DEATH TOLL EXCEEDS 100 IN NORTH CAROLINA

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services reported more than 100 people died in connection with the storm, most of the victims around Asheville and Buncombe County.

The The governor of the state estimated the total damage at about 53 billion dollarsmaking Helene the costliest natural disaster in North Carolina history.

“This storm left a trail of destruction in our beautiful mountains that we won’t soon forget, but I know the people of western North Carolina are determined to rebuild better than ever. These initial funds are a good start, but the staggering amount of damage shows that we are very much at the forefront of this recovery effort,” Gov. Roy Cooper said in a statement during the storm.