“I’ll have a Hurricane, please.” The words taste sour, but my request is met with a sweet smile. “Of course, may I see some ID?” It’s a surreal moment, purchasing a somewhat inappropriately listed cocktail from a pop-up bar when, just four months earlier, the very same bar had a floor, four walls and a roof.
Hurricane Ian did not leave a single floorboard belonging to La Ola Surfside Restaurant and Bar, but this hasn’t stopped its owners bringing live music, thirst-quenching drinks and a jovial atmosphere to Fort Myers Beach. Locals sit in the sunshine at mismatched tables and chairs on the promenade, singing along to Sweet Caroline (of all tunes) and shaking homemade maracas to the familiar beat.
On the opposite side of the prom, a gigantic and hazardous mountain of crumbled concrete, rusting metal and exposed wires serves as a stark reminder of the destruction Hurricane Ian brought to Fort Myers Beach and the surrounding area on 28 September 2022.
Jacki Liszak, president and chief executive of the Fort Myers Beach chamber of commerce, is a local resident and tourism business owner, who suffered at the hands of the storm in a big way.
Her businesses, The Sea Gypsy Inn and Sea Gypsy Vacation Rentals, were hugely affected by the storm surge, with the 18-foot wave wiping out the inn’s gift shop and 90 of her 125 holiday homes. Meanwhile, her own home was flooded so badly she’s still living without electricity.
“Hurricane Ian has had a massive impact,” she tells me. “It’s an event we always knew could potentially happen, but you never think it’s going to happen to you. It’s a once in a 500-year event.”


