ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 9月22日 03時43分
It’s been a week since Hurricane Florence slugged ashore. But the tiny town of Ivanhoe, North Carolina, is still underwater. The town, at the confluence of the Black and South Rivers, is a drain trap for Florence’s record rain and floods, with no power and no roads in or out. As many residents of the Carolinas begin to head home and asses the damage, small towns like this one are worried that the country’s attention will slip away. “The disaster just really starts for us now,” said one Ivanhoe resident, Elvira Malinek. The photographer @ilanapl spent a day in Ivanhoe with residents Autumn and Thomas Brown, who used their boat to pick up a few things from their flooded home. The couple also tried to guide their neighbor’s horse, Lady, to shallower water. Thomas has gone back daily to check on Lady, who's now on a small patch of dry land with grass. Visit the link in our profile to read more about the rural towns fighting for attention after Florence.
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2018/9/22