What a flooded garden taught me about due diligence in Western North Carolina
Why every buyer needs to ask hard questions about water, slope, and drainage before making an offer
I visited a property last week that reminded me just how important it is to ask the right questions when buying a home in Western North Carolina.
The owner had lived there for years. But everything changed after Hurricane Helene, the last big storm to roar through our area. The creek that runs between her property and the neighbor’s had shifted more than 50’ toward her side, putting a couple of sheds and the garage apartment much closer to the water than previously.
She walked around the property, showing me:
The sand Helene deposited in 3- and 4-foot-high piles.
The garden she replanted.
How high the water level reached.
Damage she’s slowly, lovingly tried to repair.
She even has an engineer's plan for fixing the foundation and drainage issues, but can't get a contractor to show up, much less commit. The county hasn’t responded. FEMA might buy out the property and turn it into green space, but that could take years. And she’s not in a flood zone.
So, it’s all… stuck.
She’s stuck.
Her story is a powerful reminder for buyers: Do your due diligence.
Consider the slope, even if a property isn’t on a creek or in a mapped flood zone.
Ask questions about water flow.
Look for signs of seepage in the crawl space or basement.
Find out what’s happened on the property before you buy—because once you’re in, you’re in.
Buying in WNC can be dreamy—mountain views, garden beds, fresh air. But dreams can turn quickly if you don’t know what’s beneath the surface.
👉 Want help evaluating a property before you buy? Contact me here. I’d be happy to walk it with you.
—Craig