Dressers, couches and mattresses littered the streets of St. Petersburg and nearby North Redington Beach after two major hurricanes hit Florida’s Gulf Coast in just over two weeks. Now, residents are returning from Hurricane Milton after evacuation orders, hoping to have a home to return to at all.

Martha Steinway, 73, returned to her mobile home park in St. Petersburg on Thursday after evacuating to Tampa. She found complete destruction.

St. Petersburg, south of Tampa, is supposed to be sacred ground, she said. “We just thought ‘Oh yeah, another hurricane’… I was one of those Floridians saying, ‘We’ll be fine, we’ll be fine.”

She was fine, but her home of five years wasn’t.

Steinway returned to an overwhelming stench of mold – caused from storm surges and mass amounts of water brought both Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Their belongings are out on the street, damaged and unsalvageable.

“Thank God that we’re alive,” she said.

She and her husband, who are both retired, will have to find a place to start over, amid what she described as high prices in St. Petersburg, she said.

While Milton brought further damage, the earlier hurricane helped Janice Hoyle, 82, and her husband, Harry, 80, better prepare their home in North Redington Beach for another major storm after their boat and jet ski were slammed into a neighboring kitchen.

“You get smarter every time. We learned to do something,” she said.

Ahead of Hurricane Milton, the couple applied over 6 feet of tape on their windows to protect against the storm surge they saw during Helene.

Even sheltering at Martin Plant hospital after Janice Hoyle underwent a surgery, the two were scared senseless.

“I was so afraid the surge was going to take our car and do the same thing it did to the boat,” he said. “We were so unbelievably worried.”

Helene’s impact, while unexpected for these communities, didn’t just help residents prepare, but also helped persuade residents of Florida’s barrier islands to heed evacuation orders in anticipation of Hurricane Milton, Lt. Chris Wilfong of Pinellas Suncoast Fire & Rescue said.

“Not many people evacuated for Helene,” he said. “I think they saw what happened and they were afraid of that happening again.”

Roberts Rivera, 68, of Redington Beach didn’t evacuate for Hurricane Helene but did for Hurricane Milton. Rivera has only ever previously evacuated for Hurricane Ian in his eight years of living in Florida.

“I didn’t want to put myself in danger or my girlfriend or first responders or anyone else,” he said.

His house has power but not much else. During Hurricane Helene, he climbed out of his first-story window and watched from his neighbors as his house flooded, destroying everything in it.

He lost both his vehicles and two Harley Davidson motorcycles – his only forms of transportation.

“Time to start over,” he said.

Hurricane Milton made landfall further south from the coastal communities of Redington Beach and St. Petersburg, but both experienced tornadoes and high winds, compared to Hurricane Helene which brought high storm surges.
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This story was produced by Fresh Take Florida, a news service of the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. The reporter can be reached at kairilowery@ufl.edu. You can donate to support our students here.

Damaged belongings left on the curb after a tornado tore the roof off of the house during Hurricane Milton in Redington Shores, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Polina and Demitry Koronkevich walk through their neighborhood to assess the damage after Hurricane Milton in Redington Shores, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Delia Holland waves as she returns home and unpacks her rental car used to evacuate for Hurricane Milton. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Michael Clark takes a picture of the damage in Harbor Lights Mobile Home Park after Hurricane Milton. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Terry and Jodi Faucher walk through Harbor Lights Mobile Home Park assessing the damage from Hurricane Milton in Seminole, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
The canopy over the gas pumps at a Chevron gas station fell, taking a gas pump station with it in Largo, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Colorado Task Force in Clearwater, Fla. preparing to go respond to civilians in need. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
The sunset casts colors over the debris from Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton in Redington Shores, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
The walls of this house were washed away by Hurricane Milton’s storm surge to reveal a made bed in the debris in Seminole, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Harry and Jannis Hoyle show how their boat ended up on top of their neighbor’s pool deck as a result of Hurricane Milton in Redington Shores, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
This house in Redington Shores, Fla. was gutted and is unlivable despite the flourishing greenery, as a result of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Stilts and a toy car sit among broken glass outside of a home affected by Hurricane Milton’s storm surge in Seminole, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
A “Smile! You’re on camera” sign on an outdoor shower remains untouched despite the destruction of the house behind it due to Hurricane Milton in Seminole, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
A framed photo of children sits among a large pile of debris from Hurricane Helene in Seminole, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
An American Flag sits among the damage caused in Seminole, Fla. from Hurricane Milton. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
This house built in 1961 sees devastation as its roof was torn off by a tornado in Redington Shores, Fla. during Hurricane Milton. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
A neighborhood in Redington Shores, Fla. looks abandoned following mandatory evacuation orders from Hurricane Milton. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Debris and furniture contaminated by storm surge water piles up on the side of the road in Seminole, Fla. October 10th, 2024. Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz
Credit: Photo by Kaley Mantz