'We've never been hit like this'published at 17:12 British Summer Time 30 September 2022
Alexandra Ostasiewicz
Reporting from Florida
![Bottles on Fort Myers beach](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/640/cpsprodpb/vivo/live/images/2022/9/30/39a1dd0e-cbec-4007-84da-b9ab9e99a37a.png.webp)
It’s a brilliantly sunny day on Fort Myers Beach.
Amid the heat and salty air, a massive clean up is under way.
This coast was one of the hardest hit by Hurricane Ian and you can see the signs everywhere you look. Debris and even an abandoned vehicle line the street to the waterfront.
At Coconut Jacks, a team of employees is hard at work trying to salvage what they can.
“We’ve never been hit like this,” the general manager told me.
He estimates that as much as 8ft (2.4m) of water flooded into the restaurant from the storm surge.
They hope the structure can be saved, but are confident that everything inside will need to be replaced.
![A destroyed car in Fort Myers](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/640/cpsprodpb/vivo/live/images/2022/9/30/d2aaabfa-8d08-4d43-b92c-094a8b3f9b92.png.webp)