If you're like most homeowners, thinking about roof repairs isn't something you do very often. But when it comes to protecting your family, few home-related features do more than your roof does. Your home's roof is much more than a "hat" for your house. It keeps outside elements at bay like rain, wind, sleet, and snow. It also plays an important part in keeping you dry, warm, and comfortable through all four seasons. Those squirrels and other critters you see roaming around your property? It helps keep them away from your family, too.
When you consider those factors, it's easy to see why your roof is such a crucial piece of your everyday life. That's why, when your roof needs quality maintenance, renovations, or repairs, hiring a trustworthy roofing company in Bucksport, SC should be high on your priority list.
For years, Lowco roofing has been South Carolina's go-to roofing contractor for repairs, installations, and other roofing services. As Lowcountry locals, we consider ourselves more than just a roofing company. We're your friends and neighbors who you might see shopping at the local grocery store. As a family-owned roofing company, we pride ourselves on integrity, hard work, and personalized roofing services you can count on.
There's no secret formula that makes our company successful - we simply provide our customers with the highest quality work performed by expert roofing professionals. We like to do right by our customers because if the roles were reversed, that's how we'd like it too. The bottom line is that we do right by our customers and treat them the way we would like our own family to be treated.
When you choose Lowco Roofing, you can rest assured that you'll get the very best:
Lowco Roofing is a family-owned and operated business with over 30 years of roofing experience. There's no roofing project too small or large for our team to handle. We've seen and done it all, from major roof replacements to preventative roofing maintenance. When combined with our customer service, material selection, and available warranties, our experience sets us apart from other roofing contractors.
Lowco Roofing has earned the respect and admiration of our customers by delivering the best craftsmanship and overall customer satisfaction. Our team is happy to assist you with any questions you have. Whether you need a roof inspection for your new home or have questions about roofing shingles, we're here to serve you.
From shingles, metal, and tile to commercial flat roofing, Lowco Roofing has the product lines and expertise to complete your job correctly, on time, and within your budget. As an Owens Corning Preferred Contractor, we offer the largest selection of shingle styles and products from the most trusted name in shingle manufacturers.
As roofing experts, we know that warranties are important to our customers. That's why we offer the best product warranties around, including lifetime warranties on our shingles. With these warranties in place, you can have peace of mind knowing that your roof protects what matters most in your life.
Now that you know more about Lowco Roofing in South Carolina, you're probably ready to learn more about our roofing services in Bucksport, SC. Here are just a few of our most popular specialties:
If you've lived in South Carolina for long, you know that the weather can be crazy. One moment, it's bright and sunny outside and the next, it's raining cats and dogs. The reality is that South Carolina storms and our climate can wreak havoc on your roof. That's why, when your roof is damaged, you need a top-rated roofing contractor to perform expert roof repairs.
Whether you know for sure you have roof damage, or you're thinking ahead and need preventative maintenance, we can help. It all starts with a thorough roof inspection, so we can understand the scope of your repair needs. Once we know what kind of damage or maintenance you need, our team gets to work repairing damaged materials. When it's all said and done, you can rest easy at night knowing your family is better protected than they were the night before.
But don't wait until it's too late - we've seen countless examples of homeowners procrastinating about their roof repairs. It never ends well! Contact our office today to schedule your free repair estimate.
Today's world is filled with independent thinkers and DIY specialists, which should be applauded. And as a homeowner, it makes sense to take care of minor issues and repairs yourself. But when it comes to significant, often complex repairs involving your roof, it's always best to rely on licensed, insured roofing contractors. Here's why:
At Lowco Roofing, we aim to provide outstanding roof repairs and high-quality service. When we repair, replace, or install a new roof in South Carolina, we go the extra mile to make sure our job is completed with excellence. We know the devil is in the details, which is why we triple-check our work for quality. Our goal is to exceed your expectations with real-deal roofing craftsmanship, not mediocre service. If you want your roof repairs to last, it's always best to go pro with Lowco Roofing.
Like those you'll find at Lowco Roofing, the best roofing contractors have many years, if not decades, of professional experience. That experience is priceless and is one of the reasons why so many customers choose our roofing business. Our contractors have an incredible depth of knowledge, both in roofing repair theory and in practical application. No amount of reading, research, or YouTube videos will compare to real-world, high-level experience.
As a customer, you want every assurance possible that your roof repairs and products will last for the long haul. We offer the roofing industry's best product warranties to protect your investment, including lifetime warranties on our shingles. As an Owens Corning preferred contractor, you know you're hiring an elite roofing contractor in Bucksport, SC. As part of the Owens Corning network, you can have confidence that we are dedicated to service, craftsmanship, and reliability.
True roofing experts have the tools and training to get the job done quickly and more efficiently than amateurs. Our customers trust us with their roofing repairs because it frees them up to spend time with family and go about their lives without being burdened by roof work. Your weekends are valuable - don't waste them worrying about your leaky roof. We've got your back!
Safety is often the most pressing concern for homeowners and one of the biggest reasons to hire an experienced roofing professional. Going pro not only helps ensure your safety - it also protects the safety of your home as well. Roof repairs usually involve climbing on ladders, balancing on roofs dozens of feet in the air, and performing under pressure. For the average homeowner in South Carolina, that can create a recipe for disaster. Remember, if you're injured while trying to repair your roof, you won't be the only person suffering. Your family will, too.
Installing a new roof on your home is a complex, intensive process that should be performed by licensed professionals. It can be a large investment, but it's one that will certainly pay off in the months and years that follow. Not only will your family be safer and more comfortable, but a new roof can also raise your home value.
Whether you're giving your home a much-needed re-design or your current roof is in bad shape, Lowco Roofing is the company you can trust to help. Our roof installation experts have replaced countless roofs for homeowners in South Carolina. We hold ourselves to the highest standards to ensure product longevity, customer satisfaction, and quality craftsmanship.
The benefits of Lowco roof installations include:
It might seem obvious, but replacing an old roof is a safe, responsible decision for your family. This is especially true if you know for sure that your current roof is in bad shape.
Be the envy of your neighborhood! Replacing your old which makes your home look great and can increase the value of your property when it's time to sell.
Installing a new roof is often a more energy-efficient option than keeping your old one. As a bonus, many homeowners enjoy lower utility and energy bills when replacing their roofs.
Because Lowco Roofing uses top-quality roofing materials and shingles from Owens Corning, you can be confident your roof will last for years.
There are many reasons why you might want to consider replacing your roof, but most often, the choice stems from necessity. But how do you know when it's time to replace instead of repair?
They say that knowledge is power, but knowing the warning signs of an unsafe roof can save lives. That might sound far-fetched, but if your roof is old and dilapidated, it could be a serious safety issue for your family. To make matters worse, old roofs can cause increased utility bills and affect your overall curb appeal. If your roof looks horrible, costs you money, and fails to protect you from the elements, it's time to call Lowco Roofing.
Here are a few additional signs to look out for:
Cracked shingles on your roof render the structure nearly useless. Generally, harsh storms and South Carolina weather cause shingles to crack, especially over time. Cracked shingles are easy to spot, so if you see them, it should be a red flag.
The flashing around chimneys, vents, and skylights seals the seams of your roof, keeping rain and weather out. Examine these points closely to ensure your flashing isn't cracked or broken. If it is, you could have a major water leak, which damages your entire roof.
If your roof looks like it's sagging or drooping, you need a roof replacement ASAP. Check your roof's surface for signs of rotting boards, trapped moisture, or sagging spots at the lowest points of your roof.
How old is your roof? Many roofs, especially those with asphalt shingles, can last for decades. But they don't last forever. Review any home improvement records you have to find out when your roof was installed or repaired. If you can find out when your roof was installed, you will have a better idea how much life it has left. As a rule of thumb, common asphalt shingle roofs last 20 to 25 years. A roof installed over existing shingles needs to be replaced after 20 years, if not sooner.
Moss can add a certain old-school, prestigious look to your home, but in reality, it spells trouble for your roof. Moss, like mold and fungi, indicates trapped moisture. When moisture has infested your roof, it could mean it's close to ruining. You could try to carefully remove moss or mold growth with a stiff brush, but chances are you'll need professional help to address underlying problems.
There's a reason why so many South Carolina homeowners turn to Lowco for roofing services. Sure, we could talk about our accolades and how we're better than other roofing companies. But the truth is, we'd prefer to show you with hard work and fair pricing.
From roof repairs to roof replacement, there's no better company to trust than Lowco Roofing. We have the expertise, experience, products, and tools to get the job done right, no matter your roofing problem. We'll work with you to select the best materials for your roofing needs and budget, and we'll make sure the job is done right from start to finish.
Previously proposed solar farm projects in other parts of Horry County in the past several years did not make it past the drawing board over environmental concerns by county officials.The nearly 500-acre site is expected to generate 55 megawatts of power per year, which is enough to power more than 9,000 homes, according to data from the Solar Energy Industries Association.Developed and built with a $50 million investment by North Carolina-based Pine Gate Renewables, the solar farm passed on an April 19 vote will be located on ...
Previously proposed solar farm projects in other parts of Horry County in the past several years did not make it past the drawing board over environmental concerns by county officials.
The nearly 500-acre site is expected to generate 55 megawatts of power per year, which is enough to power more than 9,000 homes, according to data from the Solar Energy Industries Association.
Developed and built with a $50 million investment by North Carolina-based Pine Gate Renewables, the solar farm passed on an April 19 vote will be located on vacant land near the intersection of U.S. 701 and Winburn Street, less than a mile from an existing solar farm powered by Santee Cooper.
A power purchase agreement has been established by Pine Gate with the state-owned energy provider who will tie the farm into their existing power substation bordering the property.
Pine Gate Renewables has additionally entered into a fee-in-lieu-of-taxes agreement with Horry County that will have the provider pay $231,000 per year, adding up to nearly $7 million over the lifespan of the farm.
“Our company starts the first conversation with the landowner and ultimately it sticks with us for the potential 40-year life of the project,” said Sean Andersen, Director of Project Management for Pine Gate Renewables.
Councilman Orton Bellamy said he previously walked the site with the developers and was assured they would use silicone in the construction rather than cadmium telluride, a material that is considered both toxic and carcinogenic by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
“It’s environmentally friendly and it’s an excellent project,” Bellamy said. “I’m very supportive of it and the individuals who live in the community are very supportive of it. The company has impeccable records.”
A formal court decree closing the case, which centered on a financially troubled Myrtle Beach timeshare complex built in the 1980s, was confirmed less than two weeks ago following the nearly $13 million sale of the now-shuttered getaway.
“The case was a great success, even though there were some things to overcome,” said Maynard Nexsen attorney Rick Mendoza, who represented a hospitality group that forced the sale of the Yachtsman Resort in an effort to recoup the money it had poured into the property.
S.C. Beach Partnership was by far the largest among the 7,200 owners of record in the aging timeshare destination at 1304 N. Ocean Blvd., controlling the equivalent of 893 weekly stays within the 159 units. The Maryland-based group bought into Yachtsman as a vacation-rental play.
It would later learn the deal was going south, fast.
Many of its fellow owners who had bought units in the resort over the past several decades — an estimated 70 percent — had walked away for one reason or another. They stopped cutting the recurring checks the 1980-era resort needed to pay for maintenance, taxes and other expenses.
The cost of chasing them all down wasn’t financially practical.
“A large number had left no current address,” Mendoza said after the bankruptcy case was finalized in late March. “People were deceased. ... What it really amounted to was the majority of owners had abandoned their interests by not making their payments.”
The mounting deficit prompted the owners association to dissolve the Yachtsman timeshare agreement more than two years ago.
S.C. Beach agreed to temporarily foot the bill for some of the operating expenses that the two 11-story buildings were incurring. In late 2022, the company asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court to force a sale of the 1.9-acre property so that it and the other owners considered to be “in good standing” could recoup at least some of their money.
HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WMBF) - Floodwaters from the Great Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers have begun spilling into the streets and neighborhoods in the Bucksport community.On Wednesday, the South Carolina Department of Transportation put up road closure signs on parts of Bucksport Road due to flooding.As of Wednesday morning, the Horry County road closures map also showed Martin Luther Drive, Mahalia Drive, and several other roads in the community flooded.The floodwater in this particular area comes from a small stream that ste...
HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WMBF) - Floodwaters from the Great Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers have begun spilling into the streets and neighborhoods in the Bucksport community.
On Wednesday, the South Carolina Department of Transportation put up road closure signs on parts of Bucksport Road due to flooding.
As of Wednesday morning, the Horry County road closures map also showed Martin Luther Drive, Mahalia Drive, and several other roads in the community flooded.
The floodwater in this particular area comes from a small stream that stems from the Great Pee Dee River, with the Waccamaw River just to the south.
Hazel Bellamy who lives on Martin Luther Drive said she had to leave her home Friday night after the water started to creep into the neighborhood.
“I can’t even get to my home right now,” said Bellamy. “I was on the phone all morning trying to find a truck that’s high enough to maybe take me to my home to grab me some clothing... me and my son.”
The situation is a repeat for Bellamy and many residents in the community with Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and Hurricane Florence two years later.
“Last time this whole community was a mess and Martin Luther Drive basically lost every home on it except three,” said Bellamy.
“Bucksport is on a continuous cycle of flooding unlike we’ve ever seen before,” said fellow resident Kevin Mishoe.
Mishoe is the president of the Association for the Betterment of Bucksport and said they’ve only received notices of buyout programs as some sort of disaster relief so far.
Mishoe said the community needs more, long-term flooding solutions.
“We have been trying to for years now to get some kind of mitigation process going,” he said.
Bellamy said after Hurricane Florence, the county helped raise her home a few feet. Despite that, she said it’s not enough to solve the flooding issues.
“Our homes won’t get water in them, but we have to leave and we’re not able to get back until the water goes down,” said Bellamy. “We need some help. We’re asking for help.”
The Horry County subcommittee on flooding recently met to discuss flood mitigation.
One solution under consideration is a snag and drag cleaning of debris along the Waccamaw River to help it flow better.
Copyright 2021 WMBF. All rights reserved.
HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WMBF) - Floodwaters from the Great Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers have begun spilling into the streets and neighborhoods in the Bucksport community.On Wednesday, the South Carolina Department of Transportation put up road closure signs on parts of Bucksport Road due to flooding.As of Wednesday morning, the Horry County road closures map also showed Martin Luther Drive, Mahalia Drive, and several other roads in the community flooded.The floodwater in this particular area comes from a small stream that ste...
HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WMBF) - Floodwaters from the Great Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers have begun spilling into the streets and neighborhoods in the Bucksport community.
On Wednesday, the South Carolina Department of Transportation put up road closure signs on parts of Bucksport Road due to flooding.
As of Wednesday morning, the Horry County road closures map also showed Martin Luther Drive, Mahalia Drive, and several other roads in the community flooded.
The floodwater in this particular area comes from a small stream that stems from the Great Pee Dee River, with the Waccamaw River just to the south.
Hazel Bellamy who lives on Martin Luther Drive said she had to leave her home Friday night after the water started to creep into the neighborhood.
“I can’t even get to my home right now,” said Bellamy. “I was on the phone all morning trying to find a truck that’s high enough to maybe take me to my home to grab me some clothing... me and my son.”
The situation is a repeat for Bellamy and many residents in the community with Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and Hurricane Florence two years later.
“Last time this whole community was a mess and Martin Luther Drive basically lost every home on it except three,” said Bellamy.
“Bucksport is on a continuous cycle of flooding unlike we’ve ever seen before,” said fellow resident Kevin Mishoe.
Mishoe is the president of the Association for the Betterment of Bucksport and said they’ve only received notices of buyout programs as some sort of disaster relief so far.
Mishoe said the community needs more, long-term flooding solutions.
“We have been trying to for years now to get some kind of mitigation process going,” he said.
Bellamy said after Hurricane Florence, the county helped raise her home a few feet. Despite that, she said it’s not enough to solve the flooding issues.
“Our homes won’t get water in them, but we have to leave and we’re not able to get back until the water goes down,” said Bellamy. “We need some help. We’re asking for help.”
The Horry County subcommittee on flooding recently met to discuss flood mitigation.
One solution under consideration is a snag and drag cleaning of debris along the Waccamaw River to help it flow better.
Copyright 2021 WMBF. All rights reserved.
But Frazier was high and dry. For another foot anyway.S.C. National Guardsmen in full dry suits rumbled down his street to evacuate people and assess the destructive remnants of Hurricane Florence flowing down gorged rivers on both sides of this quiet community. The crew traveled in a high-water rescue vehicle to make it down some streets.When they arrived at his house, Frazier declined to budge from his front porch.Water lapped at it, within a foot of coming inside. But Frazier, who’s 76, insisted he wasn’t ...
But Frazier was high and dry. For another foot anyway.
S.C. National Guardsmen in full dry suits rumbled down his street to evacuate people and assess the destructive remnants of Hurricane Florence flowing down gorged rivers on both sides of this quiet community. The crew traveled in a high-water rescue vehicle to make it down some streets.
When they arrived at his house, Frazier declined to budge from his front porch.
Water lapped at it, within a foot of coming inside. But Frazier, who’s 76, insisted he wasn’t leaving. This was home. He lived on the aptly named Frazier Road here in Bucksport, south of Conway, where families date back generations, and the names of roads and memories reflect that.
As the Guard truck rumbled away, Frazier reclined in one of two white wooden rocking chairs on his porch and smoked a stogie. A kitten snoozed on a blue recliner next to him.
His hometown sits in the palm of two major rivers — the Pee Dee and the Waccamaw, plus the large Bull Creek, all of which were flooding their banks. At that moment, water at the historic Bucksport Marina had reached 24.2 feet — and rising — already topping a record 23.7 feet set after Hurricane Matthew’s deluge wrought similar destruction.
Four more feet were headed Frazier's way, if predictions hold true, which they mostly have been so far.
A man named Henry Buck established Bucksport back in the earlier 1800s and got rich off three lumber mills along the Waccamaw River that chewed up the area’s hardwoods, cypress and pine. By 1850, those mills produced 3 million board feet of lumber a year that got sent to Georgetown, Charleston and far beyond.
Buck also ran an enormous plantation and was among the area’s largest owners of enslaved people.
Today, Bucksport remains a mostly black community filled with people who have lived here for generations, many of them military men who returned once retirement allowed and others who left to find work but couldn’t resist the lure of its forests and rivers.
Mostly, those rivers behaved over the years.
The last big flood before Matthew, locals say, was in the 1920s during the highly publicized trial of Edmund Bigham, accused of murdering his mother, brother, sister and nieces. The trial was held in Conway, and the story goes that Bigham cursed those who testified against him.
Indeed, one witness fell dead right there in the courthouse. And perhaps all of Conway fell victim because historic floodwaters rose up then, too, in what became known as the Bigham Freshet, or flood.
Bigham pleaded guilty to get a lighter sentence, and such disastrous flooding didn’t return for almost a century. Until Hurricane Matthew. And now Florence.
Bucksport remains a place where woods and rivers still trump concrete and asphalt, but like so many growing areas of South Carolina, it sits on the cusp of development.
A marine industrial park is in the works on a 48-acre tract near the marina and water plant. Horry County Council approved an agreement for it this spring with eyes on its employing a couple hundred people.
However, the Coastal Conservation League and Waccamaw Riverkeeper opposed the facility, which would sit on the Waccamaw River right next to a national wildlife refuge. They argued it could pollute the river, threaten wildlife habitat, bring truck traffic to the area’s thin roads and threaten the health of Bucksport residents.
Add flooding to the risks now.
On Monday, the marina sat underwater, and crews from the Grand Strand Water and Sewer Authority had spent recent days hauling massive amounts of dirt to build a dike to protect the nearby Bull Creek Water Treatment Plant — and its almost 100,000 customers.
"I'm feeling pretty safe," CEO Fred Richardson said. "There's no water near it yet."
But along the streets near it, house after house — more than two dozen — sit immersed in floodwaters, with four more feet of flooding to come. Many of those homes also flooded two years ago, but residents lacked the money to rebuild.
Many of them gathered on Bucksport Road on Monday, watching the water inch farther and farther up the road, down side streets, into homes.
Lifelong resident Lee Sherman doubted most folks here have flood insurance.
“That’s going to be the issue,” he said.
Yet he also doubted people would leave after this, even though some homes still stunk of mold from Matthew.
Bucksport isn’t just home. It is where family and lifelong friends live, where as a boy Sherman slipped through the woods and swam in the rivers.
“We’re all brothers and sisters, and we unite and come together,” Sherman said. “They love each other.”
And that’s a whole lot more valuable than a house, flooded or not.
Denise McCray spent most of her life on her property, too, but fled Bucksport on Sunday when she awoke to see floodwaters creeping toward her house. She got a hotel with her son and grandson for three nights.
But after that?
She couldn’t process the future yet. She wasn’t even sure how much water was in her house.
Another man walked up and peered, astonished, down Bucksport Road.
“Are those mailboxes?”
Roosevelt Sherman, a 70-year-old in a black Vietnam veteran cap, has lived in Bucksport his entire life. On Monday, he needed his medication but authorities no longer would let him traverse floodwaters to his house.
Instead, S.C. National Guardsmen helped him aboard the high-water rescue vehicle and pulled a bright orange life jacket over his head.
The dank smell of rot and raw sewage bubbled up from floodwaters covered in a sheen of oil as they drove. Trash, children’s bicycles, beach toys and small porch furniture floated in it.
Knee-high water surrounded Sherman’s sandbagged house. Another Bucksport resident, Garry Gause, hopped out in camo chest waders and slogged through the water to reach the older man’s house.
When Gause made it inside the raised house, still mostly dry, Sherman guided him to his medicine stash. He tried to explain what prescriptions he needed most.
“Tell you what, grab a paper bag and bring it all!” he hollered.
Yet, due to quirks of geography and development, other patches of Bucksport remained dry so far. The Guardsmen drove past an 82-year-old woman whose property was untouched. She too wanted to remain.
Sherman, her younger nephew, scowled with worry. Then he vowed to go rescue her if the waters came this far.
That’s what family does.
If only the flooding was confined to one area, one community, it might be easier to grapple with. But no, it’s come from the north and is heading south.
Ten days after Florence made landfall in North Carolina, Socastee sits in the crosshairs of her floodwaters surging southward. So does Georgetown, another place with a rich history and determination to rise up from challenges, natural and economic.
Local business owners were told the inlet where the Waccamaw and Pee Dee rivers dump into Winyah Bay could rise by several feet over the next couple days.
Several residents in downtown Georgetown heeded that warning and moved possessions out of their homes. Trailers and professional moving trucks were parked alongside streets on the peninsula, familiar sights as the floodwaters travel. A grandfather clock stood in the middle of Cannon street before being trucked away.
Ben Klopp wasn’t moving like his neighbors, though. His house made it through Hurricane Matthew with little to no damage. He figures he’ll make it out of this the same way.
He may move some of his carpets on the first floor upstairs, he said, but he’s staying in Georgetown.
“Everyone makes their own choices,” he said.
Chuck Richardson III unstacked the sandbags along his business on Front Street, but it wasn’t to open his real estate business back up.
More than a week after Florence made landfall, Richardson was doubling up on his flood protections in Georgetown’s historic district.
Shirtless, Richardson buttoned up the Caldwell Banking office the best he could. He added more plywood and thicker sheets of plastic.
“At the very least it will keep the fish, crabs and mud out,” Richardson said.
The threat of a storm surge was gone. The threat now came from the Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers — both swollen with the torrential rains dropped by Florence more than a week ago.
Like many business owners in Georgetown’s historic district, Richardson has become used to flooding in recent years. Hurricane Matthew flooded shops and storefronts along Front Street two years ago.
“We’ve become pros at this,” Richardson said.
Across the street, Chris Ferrell and the other employees of Tomlinson’s packed up everything inside and loaded it into an awaiting moving truck.
They wrapped and boxed picture frames, jewelry and everything else in the historic department store.
“Pretty much everyone on Front Street is packing up and heading for higher ground,” Ferrell said. “Usually I’m the window decorator. Now I’m the box taper.”
If Georgetown winds up like Nichols and Conway and Bucksport, other towns in the flood's path, she might soon also become mover and boater.
Reach Glenn Smith at 843-937-5556. Follow him on Twitter @glennsmith5.
But Frazier was high and dry. For another foot anyway.S.C. National Guardsmen in full dry suits rumbled down his street to evacuate people and assess the destructive remnants of Hurricane Florence flowing down gorged rivers on both sides of this quiet community. The crew traveled in a high-water rescue vehicle to make it down some streets.When they arrived at his house, Frazier declined to budge from his front porch.Water lapped at it, within a foot of coming inside. But Frazier, who’s 76, insisted he wasn’t ...
But Frazier was high and dry. For another foot anyway.
S.C. National Guardsmen in full dry suits rumbled down his street to evacuate people and assess the destructive remnants of Hurricane Florence flowing down gorged rivers on both sides of this quiet community. The crew traveled in a high-water rescue vehicle to make it down some streets.
When they arrived at his house, Frazier declined to budge from his front porch.
Water lapped at it, within a foot of coming inside. But Frazier, who’s 76, insisted he wasn’t leaving. This was home. He lived on the aptly named Frazier Road here in Bucksport, south of Conway, where families date back generations, and the names of roads and memories reflect that.
As the Guard truck rumbled away, Frazier reclined in one of two white wooden rocking chairs on his porch and smoked a stogie. A kitten snoozed on a blue recliner next to him.
His hometown sits in the palm of two major rivers — the Pee Dee and the Waccamaw, plus the large Bull Creek, all of which were flooding their banks. At that moment, water at the historic Bucksport Marina had reached 24.2 feet — and rising — already topping a record 23.7 feet set after Hurricane Matthew’s deluge wrought similar destruction.
Four more feet were headed Frazier's way, if predictions hold true, which they mostly have been so far.
A man named Henry Buck established Bucksport back in the earlier 1800s and got rich off three lumber mills along the Waccamaw River that chewed up the area’s hardwoods, cypress and pine. By 1850, those mills produced 3 million board feet of lumber a year that got sent to Georgetown, Charleston and far beyond.
Buck also ran an enormous plantation and was among the area’s largest owners of enslaved people.
Today, Bucksport remains a mostly black community filled with people who have lived here for generations, many of them military men who returned once retirement allowed and others who left to find work but couldn’t resist the lure of its forests and rivers.
Mostly, those rivers behaved over the years.
The last big flood before Matthew, locals say, was in the 1920s during the highly publicized trial of Edmund Bigham, accused of murdering his mother, brother, sister and nieces. The trial was held in Conway, and the story goes that Bigham cursed those who testified against him.
Indeed, one witness fell dead right there in the courthouse. And perhaps all of Conway fell victim because historic floodwaters rose up then, too, in what became known as the Bigham Freshet, or flood.
Bigham pleaded guilty to get a lighter sentence, and such disastrous flooding didn’t return for almost a century. Until Hurricane Matthew. And now Florence.
Bucksport remains a place where woods and rivers still trump concrete and asphalt, but like so many growing areas of South Carolina, it sits on the cusp of development.
A marine industrial park is in the works on a 48-acre tract near the marina and water plant. Horry County Council approved an agreement for it this spring with eyes on its employing a couple hundred people.
However, the Coastal Conservation League and Waccamaw Riverkeeper opposed the facility, which would sit on the Waccamaw River right next to a national wildlife refuge. They argued it could pollute the river, threaten wildlife habitat, bring truck traffic to the area’s thin roads and threaten the health of Bucksport residents.
Add flooding to the risks now.
On Monday, the marina sat underwater, and crews from the Grand Strand Water and Sewer Authority had spent recent days hauling massive amounts of dirt to build a dike to protect the nearby Bull Creek Water Treatment Plant — and its almost 100,000 customers.
"I'm feeling pretty safe," CEO Fred Richardson said. "There's no water near it yet."
But along the streets near it, house after house — more than two dozen — sit immersed in floodwaters, with four more feet of flooding to come. Many of those homes also flooded two years ago, but residents lacked the money to rebuild.
Many of them gathered on Bucksport Road on Monday, watching the water inch farther and farther up the road, down side streets, into homes.
Lifelong resident Lee Sherman doubted most folks here have flood insurance.
“That’s going to be the issue,” he said.
Yet he also doubted people would leave after this, even though some homes still stunk of mold from Matthew.
Bucksport isn’t just home. It is where family and lifelong friends live, where as a boy Sherman slipped through the woods and swam in the rivers.
“We’re all brothers and sisters, and we unite and come together,” Sherman said. “They love each other.”
And that’s a whole lot more valuable than a house, flooded or not.
Denise McCray spent most of her life on her property, too, but fled Bucksport on Sunday when she awoke to see floodwaters creeping toward her house. She got a hotel with her son and grandson for three nights.
But after that?
She couldn’t process the future yet. She wasn’t even sure how much water was in her house.
Another man walked up and peered, astonished, down Bucksport Road.
“Are those mailboxes?”
Roosevelt Sherman, a 70-year-old in a black Vietnam veteran cap, has lived in Bucksport his entire life. On Monday, he needed his medication but authorities no longer would let him traverse floodwaters to his house.
Instead, S.C. National Guardsmen helped him aboard the high-water rescue vehicle and pulled a bright orange life jacket over his head.
The dank smell of rot and raw sewage bubbled up from floodwaters covered in a sheen of oil as they drove. Trash, children’s bicycles, beach toys and small porch furniture floated in it.
Knee-high water surrounded Sherman’s sandbagged house. Another Bucksport resident, Garry Gause, hopped out in camo chest waders and slogged through the water to reach the older man’s house.
When Gause made it inside the raised house, still mostly dry, Sherman guided him to his medicine stash. He tried to explain what prescriptions he needed most.
“Tell you what, grab a paper bag and bring it all!” he hollered.
Yet, due to quirks of geography and development, other patches of Bucksport remained dry so far. The Guardsmen drove past an 82-year-old woman whose property was untouched. She too wanted to remain.
Sherman, her younger nephew, scowled with worry. Then he vowed to go rescue her if the waters came this far.
That’s what family does.
If only the flooding was confined to one area, one community, it might be easier to grapple with. But no, it’s come from the north and is heading south.
Ten days after Florence made landfall in North Carolina, Socastee sits in the crosshairs of her floodwaters surging southward. So does Georgetown, another place with a rich history and determination to rise up from challenges, natural and economic.
Local business owners were told the inlet where the Waccamaw and Pee Dee rivers dump into Winyah Bay could rise by several feet over the next couple days.
Several residents in downtown Georgetown heeded that warning and moved possessions out of their homes. Trailers and professional moving trucks were parked alongside streets on the peninsula, familiar sights as the floodwaters travel. A grandfather clock stood in the middle of Cannon street before being trucked away.
Ben Klopp wasn’t moving like his neighbors, though. His house made it through Hurricane Matthew with little to no damage. He figures he’ll make it out of this the same way.
He may move some of his carpets on the first floor upstairs, he said, but he’s staying in Georgetown.
“Everyone makes their own choices,” he said.
Chuck Richardson III unstacked the sandbags along his business on Front Street, but it wasn’t to open his real estate business back up.
More than a week after Florence made landfall, Richardson was doubling up on his flood protections in Georgetown’s historic district.
Shirtless, Richardson buttoned up the Caldwell Banking office the best he could. He added more plywood and thicker sheets of plastic.
“At the very least it will keep the fish, crabs and mud out,” Richardson said.
The threat of a storm surge was gone. The threat now came from the Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers — both swollen with the torrential rains dropped by Florence more than a week ago.
Like many business owners in Georgetown’s historic district, Richardson has become used to flooding in recent years. Hurricane Matthew flooded shops and storefronts along Front Street two years ago.
“We’ve become pros at this,” Richardson said.
Across the street, Chris Ferrell and the other employees of Tomlinson’s packed up everything inside and loaded it into an awaiting moving truck.
They wrapped and boxed picture frames, jewelry and everything else in the historic department store.
“Pretty much everyone on Front Street is packing up and heading for higher ground,” Ferrell said. “Usually I’m the window decorator. Now I’m the box taper.”
If Georgetown winds up like Nichols and Conway and Bucksport, other towns in the flood's path, she might soon also become mover and boater.