One veterinarian, and her pets, rode out Ian’s fierce eye in a Fort Myers parking garage

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As Hurricane Ian lashed Fort Myers with 140 mph winds and sloshed floodwaters over the banks of the Caloosahatchee River, veterinarian Sharon Powell and her husband retreated to the safest place they could find for themselves and their pets — a downtown parking garage.

Then they waited, dreading the next wave of the Category 4 storm that made landfall at Cayo Costa north of Captiva at about 3 p.m. Wednesday.

“The surge from the river will be coming this way soon,” Powell shouted while dodging chunks of drywall from a nearby construction site that were flying like missiles through the garage. “They’re predicting 8 to 12 feet. So we will be ready to go up to the second level.”

They rode out Ian as the fierce southern eye wall drove record storm surge into Southwest Florida communities. Portions of Fort Myers were submerged.

Powell, 59, is a Fort Myers native. She owns the Edison Park Animal Hospital and lives in a house less than a mile from the Sun Trust Plaza garage, located on Martin Luther King Boulevard.

Streets of downtown Fort Myers flooded due to the surge of the Caloosahatchee River as Hurricane Ian hits the west coast of Florida as a Category 4 storm on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022.
Streets of downtown Fort Myers flooded due to the surge of the Caloosahatchee River as Hurricane Ian hits the west coast of Florida as a Category 4 storm on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022.

“This is the most destructive and dangerous hurricane I’ve ever seen here,” she said, nimbly jumping over a shrub that skidded through the garage. “It’s worse than we expected.”

Ian, large and lumbering, and just two mph short of a Category 5 when it hit the mainland at 155 mph, pummeled and soaked Florida’s Gulf Coast islands, towns, cities and gated communities all day and into the night.

READ MORE: WATCH: SW Florida firefighters salvage life-saving tools from flooding caused by Ian

Late afternoon, in another parking garage south of downtown and across the river from Cape Coral, a Herald reporter and photographer hunkered down as the eye churned slowly past, listening to the wind’s shrieks and moans and flinching when electrical transformers blew and lit up the air with green flashes. A gas station sign was ripped to shreds, trees bowed and broke, roof tiles sailed, aluminum siding unraveled, a dumpster tumbled across Colonial Boulevard. A massive SUV shuddered in the gusts. Rain whirled at impossible angles.

Hurricane Ian plummets to Cat 1, but still forecast to hit Central Florida with strong winds

Out on the streets, stoplights dangled 6 feet above intersections. Fallen trees created blockades. All roads leading to Fort Myers Beach and the Sanibel causeway turned into impassable rivers.

A boat is seen from the Midpoint Bridge in the Caloosahatchee River in Fort Myers as Hurricane Ian hits the west coast of Florida as a Category 4 storm on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022.
A boat is seen from the Midpoint Bridge in the Caloosahatchee River in Fort Myers as Hurricane Ian hits the west coast of Florida as a Category 4 storm on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022.

The city center was flooded with 4-5 feet of water. Boats from the river bumped against parking meters.

Back at the parking garage, Powell and her spouse, Jon, let pit bull Emma — wearing a dog-size life jacket — and terrier mix Norman walk around.

“Norman is 18 and calm but Emma is very anxious,” Powell said. “Storm anxiety in animals is complicated. I prescribed anti-anxiety meds to some of my patients in anticipation of Ian. They can feel the drop in barometric pressure, the static charges, and they’re acutely sensitive to the noises.”

The Powells battened down their house and the clinic before taking cover in the garage.

“Our clinic cats — Shirley and Miles — are safe there. It’s a fortress and they can climb up high,” Powell said, adding that Shirley was named Employee of the Month and that Miles is unflappable in a crisis.

Will their home survive the storm of the century?

“I hate to think what’s happening over there in the surge,” she said as the puddles grew beneath her feet, and the howling wind showed no sign of abating. “It could be under water soon. Or already.”

Miami Herald Staff Writer Omar Rodríguez Ortiz contributed to this report.