Floodwaters slowly receding in Tropical Storm Debby’s hardest hit areas

HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WBTW) — More than two weeks after Tropical Storm Debby soaked the region, flood-weary residents in low lying parts of Conway and Horry County are only now beginning to fully dry out

Along Conway’s Riverwalk on Sunday, waters remained waist deep in some areas while residents in Lee’s Landing — where some properties were only accessible by boat last weekend — are able to get their cars back onto roads.

Cherrick Daniels recently moved to South Carolina and frequents the Riverwalk to jet ski or walk around, but hasn’t been able to do so recently.

“I noticed it was completely flooded. You couldn’t go to the playground, you couldn’t go to the pavilion over there,” he said. “I wanted to bring my jet ski out here, but I couldn’t, because the dock’s closed.”

Daniels hoped he’d be able to get back onto the river on Sunday.

“I was planning on seeing how it was, because I heard it was flooded,” he said.

Jet ski season typically ends on Labor Day, and Daniels wants to get back out before then.

“I don’t know how long this flooding is going to take. It looked pretty bad, but I think it’s doing down a little bit,” he said. “I tell the dock isn’t going to be open anytime soon, because even where you get the life jackets is so far down, and it’s flooded all the way up.”

A no-wake order for the Intracoastal Waterway remains in place through Aug. 30.

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Hannah Huffstickler is a multimedia journalist at News13. She joined the News13 team in January 2024 after graduating from Coastal Carolina University in December of 2023. Keep up with Hannah on Facebook, X, formerly Twitter, and Instagram. You can also read more of her work here.

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