The storm left Hanalei looking like a "huge lake"
and cut off some North Shore communities, prompting
Gov. Ige to declare a state of emergency.
By Allan Parachini April 16, 2018
NORTH SHORE, Kauai -- It was the buffalo standing in the surf at Hanalei Beach that did it, reinforcing the reality that the weekend storm that rocked Kauai was different beyond conceivable description.
For 36 hours -- and, as this is written, this epic storm is not over and a flash flood warning continues in effect for a couple more hours -- Kauai has withstood the storm of all storms. The poor buffalo, loose from a herd nearby, could not have been more bewildered than the island's humans, both residents and visitors.
There was thunder so intense it shook houses at the level of a strong earthquake and rain so heavy that more than 28 inches fell in 24 hours between Saturday night and Sunday morning in Hanalei. It brought Kauai, sometimes literally, to its knees over the weekend.
The storm evolved so quickly and in so many different ways that island residents had difficulty accepting the sheer gravity of what they heard and saw for themselves and received from friends and neighbors on social media.
A buffalo, separated from a nearby herd, wanders Hanalei Beach in the midst of a 36-hour storm that dumped about 27 inches of rain in the area.
Courtesy of Ian Nelson
Examples:
A truck and ATV pushed up against a fence in Kalihiwai Valley on Kauai after a flash flood pushed through the area.
Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat
The question "How big was it?" will survive for years into the future. The National Weather Service recorded more than 28 inches of rainfall in a 24-hour period in Hanalei. One rain gauge in Hanalei reported more than 36 inches of rain.
The all-night thunder and lightning show shook houses up and down the North Shore so severely that residents with experience with California earthquakes estimated the storm produced the equivalent of a 6.0 or even 6.5 temblor. Then, after a brief intermission late Sunday morning, the sound and light show resumed and continued until late afternoon. Its visual effects evoked memories of acid trips in the 1960s.
By the time Gov. David Ige and Kauai County Mayor Bernard Carvalho declared states of emergency Sunday afternoon, the miracle was that -- as far as had been discovered to that point, at least -- there had been no lives lost and no serious injuries.
Flooding of the Hanalei River on Kauai's North Shore left Hanalei looking like a "huge lake," according to one resident, and left some communities cut off.
Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat
A waterfall right next to Kuhio Highway between Kilauea and Princeville that flows all the time but is little noticed by passing traffic gushed so hard that a mist that blew across the roadway looked a little bit like Niagara Falls.
Worrisomely, the flow is only about a hundred feet from a section of hillside that collapsed a couple of weeks ago, briefly cutting traffic flow on the island's only artery from two lanes to one. It held, at least for the moment.
One weather observer counted, during a two-hour period between 4 A.M. and 6 A.M.,
60 [ lightning
Directed Energy Weapon
]
strikes per minute from time to time [, arriving one per second vertically
with no side streamers of any kind -- celeste ].
The Red Cross opened shelters for a few hours at a time in Kapaa and Princeville, in addition to one in Hanalei that had been in operation since sometime early Saturday. The primary Red Cross shelter in Hanalei was accommodating residents whose homes were destroyed, badly damaged or inaccessible.
Anthony Quintano/Civil Beat
About 40 people were staying at the shelter in Hanalei as of Sunday morning, said Coralie Chun Matayoshi, chief executive officer for the Red Cross in Hawaii.
Kauai County spokeswoman Sarah Blane said county officials had to call in off-duty firefighters, police officers and lifeguards Saturday night to rescue about a half-dozen people who were trapped by rising floodwaters in Hanalei.
The heavy rainfall damaged or flooded dozens of homes in Hanalei, Wainiha, Haena, and Anahola, the county said.
By late afternoon, Hanalei residents were cautiously coming out of their isolation and realizing that the town had been, essentially, almost entirely under water — though not deep enough to flow into more than a handful of homes.
But then there was the lonely buffalo in Hanalei. What he or she was thinking was impossible to know, but it could not have been good.
Material from the Associated Press was used in this story.