02:27 - Source: CNN
See the devastating aftermath Idalia left throughout Florida
CNN  — 

Named for the trees that once covered the islands, Cedar Key, Florida, is located about four miles out in the Gulf of Mexico and connected to the mainland by a single road that crosses over four small, low bridges.

Its isolation is part of its appeal. With just 800 full-time residents, the island town bills itself as a “haven for artists, writers and ‘adventure’ tourists, who find the unspoiled environment their inspiration.”

It’s no haven today.

Hurricane Idalia brought record-high storm surge that flooded much of the island, lifting up and tossing old homes into the Gulf, strewing the streets and beach with chairs, microwaves, hairdryers and other debris and inundating much of the waterfront commercial district. There is no power, no water and no sewage, Cedar Key Fire and Rescue said Wednesday night, although the power was restored overnight.

Even so, early warnings, a mandatory evacuation order and a population that knows the island’s notable hurricane history prevented any loss of life. And now the rebuilding begins.

“It was a difficult evening and a difficult morning,” Michael Bobbitt, a resident who stayed behind during the hurricane, told CNN’s John Berman on Wednesday night. “But seeing everyone out cleaning up the streets and checking on their neighbors, it’s a little bit of a silver lining to a really tough situation.”

Thomas Simonetti/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Hurricane Idalia made landfall about 60 miles northwest of Cedar Key on Wednesday.

Julio Cesar Chavez/Reuters
A view of the flooding in Cedar Key, Florida, on August 30, 2023. 

Photos on the Cedar Key Fire Rescue Facebook account showing some of the early destruction. Ocean water had flooded well past the edge of the island, tossing lawn furniture and deck chairs into the street. Propane tanks were blowing off all over the island, adding another hazard, Cedar Key Fire Rescue posted.

Bobbitt said it was “heartbreaking” to see the destruction of so many buildings and old villas. Yet, he said the community was doing “surprisingly well,” all things considered.

“My neighbor’s house across from me was submerged to the roof line, but we had no injuries,” he said. “We’re here. We’ll rebuild. We’ll do what Cedar Key does. All in all, I feel incredibly blessed.”

From busy port city to quiet clam producer

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Indeed, the cycle of destruction and rebuilding is part of regular life in Cedar Key, located as it is in the hurricane-friendly warm waters of the Gulf. An unnamed hurricane destroyed the island in 1896, and Hurricane Easy ripped the roofs off most of the island’s buildings in 1950.

Cedar Key was once the terminus of Florida’s cross-state railroad and a busy port city. The famed naturalist John Muir visited in 1867 as part of a thousand-mile walk to the Gulf and wrote of the beauty of the place.

“For nineteen years my vision was bounded by forests, but to-day, emerging from a multitude of tropical plants, I beheld the Gulf of Mexico stretching away unbounded, except by the sky,” Muir wrote. “What dreams and speculative matter for thought arose as I stood on the strand, gazing out on the burnished, treeless plain!”

(He also contracted malaria in Cedar Key and recovered there for several months.)

Its days as a bustling port city are long gone. Now, visitors can enjoy the beach or one of the other natural hobbies like fishing, bird-watching in the nearby refuge and kayaking. And unlike Key West, Cedar Key has avoided high-end commercial development along its shores and remains a low-key spot.

Its main businesses are tourism and aquaculture – in particular clams. A sign at the entrance to the town states: “Welcome to Cedar Key: #1 Producer of USA’s Farm Raised Clams.”

With its warm waters year-round, Cedar Key produces over 125 million clams annually, about 90% of Florida’s clam crop, said Leslie Sturmer, a molluscan shellfish aquaculture researcher at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences based in Cedar Key, according to CNN affiliate WUFT.

What Idalia did to Cedar Key

Julio-Cesar Chavez/Reuters
A vehicle was partially submerged after the arrival of Hurricane Idalia in Cedar Key on Wednesday.

Levy County issued a mandatory evacuation order Monday for people living in coastal communities like Cedar Key.

Not everyone did so. Mayor Heath Davis estimated Tuesday that close to 100 people were not heeding warnings to evacuate. He urged people to leave and warned that emergency services would stop when winds reached 39 miles per hour Tuesday night.

“And it is imperative that our citizens realize that we’re very serious about that. We can’t allow our employees, our staff, and in this case, because our community is so small, our friends and our family go out into the storm as bad as it’s going to be and put people in danger,” he said.

In the end, it appears only a few people decided to stay behind as Idalia bore down. Bobbitt was one of them.

“We’re starting to see an almost apocalyptic scene here,” Bobbitt told CNN This Morning on Wednesday morning. “The Gulf is rising up to swallow up the boat ramp, and Dock Street, where all of our popular tourist restaurants and shops are.”

Bobbitt said he decided not to evacuate so he could help some of his elderly neighbors who weren’t able to leave. He was able to help an elderly couple evacuate before the roads flooded and cut the island off from the mainland.

“We’re out of power,” he added. “The storm surge has overwhelmed our downtown, our Dock Street, our boat ramps, the bridges on the way into town. It’s going to be a while before anyone will be able to get on or off the island. We’re effectively cut off from the world now.”

Heather Greenwood, the manager of Cedar Key Bed & Breakfast, lives just off the island and hunkered down during the storm with her dogs. She returned to the key and was overcome with emotion seeing so many people working to clean up, she told CNN’s Carlos Suarez on Thursday.

“Definitely a tear in your eye – out of joy,” she said, sifting through the wreckage of a destroyed home.

Joy?

“It’s joy. We’re all very blessed. Not one human lost their lives, and all this can be rebuilt,” she said.

Tampa Bay Times via ZUMA Press Wire
A house is seen knocked off its foundation on Wednesday, August 30, in Horseshoe Beach, Florida, in the Big Bend region where Idalia made landfall.
Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
People clean debris from a damaged building in Horseshoe Beach on August 31.
Sean Rayford/Getty Images
A lineman works to restore service on Thursday, August 31, in Perry, Florida.
Cheney Orr/Reuters
Wreckage of a home is seen in Keaton Beach, Florida, on August 31.
Cheney Orr/Reuters
Jewell Baggett sits on a bathtub amid the wreckage of the home built by her grandfather, where she grew up and three generations of her family lived, in Horseshoe Beach on August 30.
Sean Rayford/Getty Images
People work to clear I-10 of fallen trees near Madison, Florida, on August 30.
Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EFE via ZUMA Press
A person looks at the damage inside a destroyed house in Horseshoe Beach on August 30.
Thomas Simonetti/For The Washington Post/Getty Images
A boarded-up home is seen in Steinhatchee, Florida, on August 30.
Richard Burkhart/Savannah Morning News/USA Today Network
Samarra Mullis, right, and Jack Lemburg make sandwiches for residents who sought shelter at St. Michael's and All Angels Episcopal Church in Savannah, Georgia, on August 30.
Douglas R. Clifford/Tampa Bay Times/Zuma Press
Rescue workers walk through water in Steinhatchee, looking for people in need of help on August 30.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Donnye Franklin helps a friend try to get floodwaters out of his store in Crystal River, Florida, on August 30.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
A pickup truck sits halfway into a canal in Horseshoe Beach on August 30.
Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EFE via ZUMA Press
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds a press conference in Perry on August 30.
Richard Burkhart/Savannah Morning News/USA Today Network
Residents talk with Savannah Alderman Nick Palumbo by an uprooted tree in Savannah on August 30.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
In an aerial view, a vehicle drives through a flooded street in downtown Crystal River on August 30.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Ken Kruse looks out at floodwaters surrounding his apartment complex in Tarpon Springs, Florida, on August 30.
Sean Rayford/Getty Images
People work to free a vehicle that was stuck in storm debris near Mayo, Florida, on August 30.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Makatla Ritchter, left, and her mother, Keiphra Line, wade through floodwaters after having to evacuate their home in Tarpon Springs on August 30.
Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Florida's Fort Myers Beach is seen during high tide ahead of Hurricane Idalia on August 29.
Christian Monterrosa/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Shelves are left empty at a Target store in Gainesville, Florida, on August 29.
Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/AP
Electrical line technicians walk among hundreds of trucks at Duke Energy's staging location in Sumterville, Florida, on August 29.
Bob Self/The Florida Times-Union/AP
Reagan Ortagus, 1, sits in her car seat as her father, Tyler, fills sandbags in St. Johns County, Florida, on August 29.
NOAA
This satellite image, taken at 11:15 a.m. ET on August 29, shows Hurricane Idalia moving toward Florida.
Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters
Ana Iris Aguiar stands at the front door of her home after Idalia passed La Coloma, Cuba, on August 29.
Marco Bello/Reuters
A man places plywood in front of a store in Cedar Key as he prepares for Hurricane Idalia on August 29.
Adrees Latif/Reuters
Pike Electric workers fortify power lines in Clearwater, Florida, on Tuesday, August 29.
Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters
A dog named Samson looks at his owner, not pictured, as he comes back to a flooded home in Playa Majana, Cuba, on August 29.
Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Furniture is piled high inside Victor Cassano's home in Suwannee, Florida, as he prepares for Idalia on August 29.
Chris O'Meara/AP
Kiosks at the Southwest Airlines ticket counter are covered in protective wrapping at the Tampa International Airport on August 29. All flights from the airport were canceled for the day.
Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images
A couple is seen outside their house in a flooded area of Batabanó, Cuba, on Monday, August 28.
Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters
A man is evacuated from a flooded street as Idalia made landfall in Guanimar, Cuba, on August 28.
Doug Engle/USA Today/Reuters
Home Depot employee Sharon Walsh fills a cart with cases of water as customers prepare for Idalia in Ocala, Florida, on August 28.
Andrew West/The News-Press/USA Today
Fort Myers Beach resident Christine Willis prepares to evacuate the area on August 28. Her home was destroyed in Hurricane Ian, and she and her husband lost everything. They said they are not taking any chances and will stay in a hotel until Idalia passes.

Those who evacuated had to rely on photos and videos from others of the destruction and were disturbed by what they saw.

“Everything is flooded,” Shely Boivin, the manager of a beachfront motel in Cedar Key, told CNN. “I’ve seen pictures of the tide coming in. The water is just – it’s everywhere.”

Boivin said she had considered staying in Cedar Key to ride out the storm but decided against it.

“Everyone was telling me, ‘Don’t do it,’ and I’m kind of glad I didn’t now,” Boivin said. “From the pictures that I’ve seen, the whole town is flooded.”

She said she saw pictures of a nearby building with a pavilion that just washed away, along with a swing and picnic tables floating down the street. Some residents were worried about the older houses in the area, she said.

“They’re wondering if the waters are just going to pick up the foundation and just send them down First Street,” Boivin said.

Levy County Emergency Management Director John MacDonald told CNN areas like Cedar Key had “a lot of” water damage but avoided the worst.

“For the most part it could have been a heck of a lot worse,” he said.

CNN’s Amy Simonson, Lauren Mascarenhas, Denise Royal, Paradise Afshar and Sara Smart contributed to this report.