At Few’s Ford, Kimberly Radewicz looked at alley of downed trees along the river and said “looks like somebody took a giant bowling ball and just rolled it right through.”
Radewicz, the Eno River State Park superintendent, pointed to the remains of an uprooted tree. She said she didn’t know where the rest of it ended up — maybe in the woods somewhere.
Where crabgrass and other vegetation once protected the banks from erosion, branches and other debris now lined the banks, while rocks poked out of the exposed red clay like baby teeth…