Carolina Forest · Horry County · South Carolina

Storm Damage Roof Repair Carolina Forest SC — HOA & Hurricane Specialists

Carolina Forest is not a town — it is 20-plus master-planned subdivisions sharing a ZIP code, a tree canopy, and an architectural review committee. Your storm damage contractor needs to know the difference between how The Farm, Waterbridge, Avalon, and Plantation Lakes handle ARC approvals. We do. Free 21-point inspection, HOA packet filed the same day we write scope, insurance documentation in Xactimate format, and Florence 2018 veterans on every crew. Since 2022, from our Myrtle Beach base 10 minutes up International Drive.

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Carolina Forest Storm Risk: By The Numbers

Carolina Forest's storm risk profile is different from the beach and different from Conway. You are inland enough to avoid storm surge, but you live under a tree canopy, inside a stormwater- engineered community, with an HOA overlay on every exterior decision. These numbers come from NWS Wilmington, IBHS, FEMA, the US Census, and Horry County records — not estimates.

20+

Master-planned subdivisions in Carolina Forest

From The Farm and Waterbridge to Plantation Lakes and Avalon — each with its own HOA and architectural review process.

Source: Horry County records

130 mph

Horry County wind design speed

Minimum wind resistance required for new roofing. Same 130 mph standard applies inland at Carolina Forest as on the beach.

Source: SC Building Codes Council

23.63 in

State rainfall record at Loris during Florence 2018

20 miles north of Carolina Forest. The inland Waccamaw basin took similar totals — enough to overwhelm subdivision stormwater systems for days.

Source: NWS Wilmington (2018)

1,941 homes

Horry County homes damaged by Florence

Most from inland flooding, wind-driven rain, and tree strikes — not coastal storm surge. Carolina Forest subdivisions took a share.

Source: NWS / Horry County EOC (2018)

Top 3

Tree-fall is a leading hurricane insurance claim type

Inland wooded subdivisions see more tree-strike damage than oceanfront — IBHS research consistently ranks wind-driven tree impact among the top residential hurricane loss drivers.

Source: IBHS research

7–14 days

Typical HOA architectural review turnaround

Most Carolina Forest HOAs require architectural review committee approval before roof color or material changes. Plan for it or the repair gets stopped mid-install.

Source: HOA covenants across Carolina Forest subdivisions

Separate policy

Flood damage is NOT on your homeowners insurance

Flood coverage requires a NFIP policy. Wind, wind-driven rain, hail, and fallen-tree damage remain homeowners claims — and they are the most common Carolina Forest claim types.

Source: FEMA / NFIP

~25,000+

Estimated Carolina Forest population

Unincorporated master-planned region west of Myrtle Beach in Horry County, spanning the 29579 ZIP. One of the fastest- growing areas on the Grand Strand.

Source: US Census Bureau (ACS)

Why Carolina Forest is different: The beach worries about storm surge. Conway worries about the Waccamaw cresting. Carolina Forest worries about three other things — the HOA architectural review packet, the loblolly pine leaning over the back of the house, and the stormwater pond that drains too slow during a three-day rain event. Your storm damage contractor needs to understand all three.

Why Carolina Forest Roofing Is Different from the Beach

Carolina Forest sits roughly 8-12 miles inland from the Atlantic, west of Myrtle Beach, on high ground bordered by Long Bay Creek and the Waccamaw River basin. That single fact changes everything about how storms damage Carolina Forest roofs compared to oceanfront communities. You do not fight salt spray corrosion, dune erosion, or storm surge. You fight four other things that beach houses do not.

First: the tree canopy. Subdivisions like The Farm, Waterbridge, Plantation Lakes, Blackmoor, and Burning Ridge were built around mature loblolly pine stands and hardwood pockets. Those trees are beautiful and they are roof hazards. Loblolly pines crack at 50-60 mph sustained wind, dropping limbs 6-12 inches thick. Live oaks hold up better in wind but shed heavy Spanish moss that gutters were never engineered for. Tree strikes in Carolina Forest are not a shingle replacement — they are cracked decking, broken rafters, and interior damage.

Second: the HOA architectural review layer. Every major Carolina Forest subdivision operates under CC&Rs that require architectural review committee (ARC) approval for roof color and material changes. If a shingle gets discontinued between original construction and replacement — which happens constantly across 15-30 year old roofs — you submit the closest current equivalent and wait 7-14 days for ARC signoff. Skip the packet and you risk fines, forced removal, or a title lien. No oceanfront Myrtle Beach home has this step.

Third: sustained wind-driven rain. Carolina Forest is inland enough that a stalled tropical system delivers two to four days of sideways rain at 30-45 mph sustained winds. That rain pushes water under shingle tabs, around pipe boots, and past flashing at every roof penetration. The roof looks fine post-storm, but water has been driven into the deck. Rot develops over 60 to 180 days, long after the claim window has closed. Florence 2018 did this to thousands of Carolina Forest roofs that appeared undamaged on September 20 and were leaking by Thanksgiving.

Fourth: stormwater pond and drainage failures. Master-planned communities route runoff into engineered retention ponds and drainage swales. During a multi-day rain event, those systems can fill and back up — water that was supposed to drain in two hours stays for two days. Homes bordering ponds in Waterbridge, Plantation Lakes, and Forestbrook occasionally get water intrusion through the lowest parts of the house, which drives humidity into the attic and starts a slow roof decking rot separate from anything the shingles did wrong. Beach houses never face this — coastal drainage runs straight to the ocean.

Hurricane Florence 2018: The Inland Flood Carolina Forest Remembers

Hurricane Florence made landfall at Wrightsville Beach, NC on September 14, 2018 as a Category 1. The wind event for Carolina Forest was mild by hurricane standards — gusts in the 55-70 mph range, the kind of weather the Grand Strand sees during a strong tropical storm. If Florence had been a normal hurricane, Carolina Forest would have shrugged off the wind portion. It was the rain that turned Florence into one of the most damaging events in inland Horry County history.

Per the National Weather Service Wilmington post-storm assessment, Loris, SC (about 20 miles north of Carolina Forest) recorded 23.63 inches of rain over four days — the South Carolina tropical cyclone rainfall record. The broader Waccamaw basin and Long Bay Creek tributaries drained into and around Carolina Forest. Stormwater retention ponds in the subdivisions filled to capacity, then spilled over. Drainage swales that were engineered for one-hour clearance stayed full for days. The older Carolina Forest core — neighborhoods built in the 1990s around the original Carolina Forest Boulevard — saw standing water on lawns and driveways for over a week in places.

When NWS tallied structural damage across Horry County after Florence, the numbers were stark: 1,941 homes sustained damage county-wide. Most of the worst was along the Waccamaw in Conway, Bucksport, and the rural river communities — but Carolina Forest subdivisions took a share, almost entirely from inland flooding and wind-driven rain penetration rather than from the wind event itself.

The roof impact was delayed, and this is the part every Carolina Forest homeowner needs to understand. The wind damage was photographed and cataloged by September 20. The standing water drained by early October. But the slow roof failures played out over the fall and winter of 2018-2019 — leaks that showed up in December, ceiling stains that appeared in February, attic mold discovered during a spring HVAC service call. Many of those leaks were wind-driven rain intrusion that rotted decking silently for months before manifesting. Carriers by then had closed the Florence claim window and many homeowners were told the damage was "wear and tear."

We are still repairing Florence-era damage across Carolina Forest in 2026. If your home was here for Florence and has not had a professional roof inspection since — especially if you have noticed any ceiling discoloration, musty smells in the attic, or granules in the gutters — that is a call worth making. The inspection is free, and if we find Florence- delayed damage there are still supplemental claim pathways worth pursuing.

Carolina Forest Storm Damage Patterns

Every Carolina Forest storm inspection covers the same six failure modes. These are the patterns we see over and over across the 29579 subdivisions — different from what shows up on the beach and different from what shows up along the Waccamaw in Conway.

Tree-Strike & Limb Fall Damage

The most common Carolina Forest hurricane claim. Loblolly pines snap at 50-60 mph sustained winds; live oak limbs 6-12 inches thick break in 70+ mph gusts. Strike damage goes past the shingles — cracked decking, broken rafters, and interior damage. We coordinate licensed arborist removal before any roof work. Insurance classifies this as wind-caused (homeowners claim, not flood).

Wind-Driven Rain Leaks

Three-day sustained rain events push water sideways under shingle tabs, around pipe boots, and past flashing at roof-wall transitions. No visible exterior damage, but the roof deck underneath is saturated. These leaks typically appear 60-180 days post-storm. We test attic moisture content with a pinless meter during every Carolina Forest post-storm inspection.

Broken Shingle Seal Strips

Sustained 45+ mph wind events break the thermal seal strip between shingle courses. The shingles look perfectly fine from the ground, but they are no longer sealed — the next heavy rain drives water under the tabs. Florence did this to thousands of Carolina Forest roofs that appeared undamaged after the storm. Only a hands-on inspection catches it.

Inland Hail Damage

Thunderstorms crossing the Pee Dee region often lose intensity approaching the coast and drop their hail cores over inland Horry County — Carolina Forest included. Damage shows up as bruised shingles (granules knocked loose), dented metal vents, and dinged gutters. Usually invisible from ground level; only visible with a ladder and a trained eye.

Soffit, Fascia & Gable Damage

Wind pressure on Carolina Forest's two-story builder-spec homes concentrates at the eaves and gable ends. Soffit panels get blown out, vented fascia separates, and gable returns crack. These failures let wind-driven rain into the attic directly — bypassing the roof entirely. Insurance covers soffit repair when it is part of a properly documented storm damage scope.

Stormwater Pond Backup & Attic Humidity

Homes backing onto stormwater retention ponds in Waterbridge, Plantation Lakes, Forestbrook, and similar subdivisions can see water intrusion at the foundation during multi-day rain events. That ground moisture drives humidity into the attic via the ventilation system, condenses on cool decking, and rots framing from the inside out. Separate from anything the shingles did, and often missed by adjusters.

Carolina Forest HOA Approval: What You Actually Have to File

Every major Carolina Forest subdivision has an architectural review committee (ARC) and a set of recorded covenants (CC&Rs) that restrict visible exterior changes. Roof color, roof material, and in some cases even vent placement fall under ARC jurisdiction. If you replace your roof without submitting an ARC packet, you are exposed to fines (typically $50-$500 per violation), a notice of non-compliance, and in extreme cases a lien on your property title. After major storm events some HOAs issue blanket expedited approvals for same-color, same-material replacements — but you still have to file the packet.

The standard ARC packet includes: a completed architectural modification request form (each HOA has its own), a manufacturer spec sheet for the proposed shingle, a physical color sample or image, a copy of your contractor's South Carolina contractor license, proof of general liability insurance, and a project timeline. Some HOAs also require a property survey and a certificate of good standing. Most are submitted by email to the HOA management company.

Typical turnaround time: 7-14 days across most Carolina Forest HOAs. ARCs meet on a set schedule (monthly or bi-weekly in most cases), so timing your submittal to the meeting cycle matters. We file the packet the same day we write the insurance scope so the HOA review runs in parallel with the adjuster coordination — neither step slows the other.

Common Carolina Forest ARC friction points: (1) original shingle SKU discontinued, requiring a closest- match approval; (2) homeowner wants to change colors, which becomes a discretionary approval subject to whether it fits the neighborhood palette; (3) homeowner switches from architectural asphalt to metal or synthetic slate, which requires material-change approval and often a neighborhood notice period. We navigate all three regularly.

We maintain a working reference of the architectural palette for every major Carolina Forest HOA — The Farm, Waterbridge, Avalon, Plantation Lakes, Berkshire Forest, Brighton Lakes, Covington Lake, Cypress Keyes, Hunters Ridge, St. James Park, and the rest — which shortens your ARC review considerably because we know what they approve and what they reject before we submit.

Horry County Permits for Carolina Forest Roofs

Carolina Forest is unincorporated Horry County, so all permits route through Horry County Building Codes, headquartered at the Government & Justice Center in downtown Conway. Full re-roofs, decking replacement, and material changes all require a permit. Partial shingle repairs or flashing replacement typically do not.

Under the adopted SC Building Code, Horry County sits in the 130 mph wind design zone — the same rating required for oceanfront Myrtle Beach. That surprises Carolina Forest homeowners who assume their inland location means relaxed wind standards. It does not. Every new or replacement roof must be fastened to resist 130 mph sustained wind, which means six-nail fastening patterns per shingle (not four), enhanced starter course, and ridge cap installation specs per manufacturer instructions. We follow IRC 2018 with SC amendments on every permitted Carolina Forest job.

For homes inside FEMA flood zones — most Carolina Forest addresses are Zone X, but some homes along Long Bay Creek, pond backs, or drainage easements are in Zone AE — floodplain development rules can apply if repairs cross the 50% substantial improvement threshold. Almost no standalone roof replacement hits that number, but reconstruction after a major event can. We pull your FEMA zone at job start so nothing surprises the permit inspector.

Permit fees in Horry County are modest — typically $50-$250 for a residential re-roof — but inspection protocol is strict. Tear-off inspection, mid-install underlayment inspection, and final inspection are standard. We schedule every inspection, meet the inspector on-site, and handle any correction notices directly. Unpermitted roof work voids your manufacturer warranty, complicates insurance claims at the next storm, and creates closing problems when you sell the home. No shortcut is worth it.

Our Carolina Forest Storm Response

Every Carolina Forest storm damage project runs the same five-phase workflow. No variation — the process is what keeps HOA approval, insurance, and county permits all aligned so nothing stops the work mid-install.

1

Emergency Tarping & Tree Assessment

Active water intrusion, fallen limb, or structural compromise triggers same-day tarping (conditions permitting) and an arborist coordination call. For tree strikes, we do not touch the roof until a licensed arborist has sectioned and lowered the tree with rigging. 24/7 response line.

2

21-Point Carolina Forest Inspection

Shingles, flashing, valleys, ridge caps, pipe boots, soffit, fascia, gable returns, decking, attic moisture, ventilation balance, insulation saturation. Every point photographed, GPS-tagged, and documented in an adjuster-ready Xactimate- format report. Free and no obligation.

3

HOA Architectural Review Packet

ARC form, manufacturer spec, color sample, contractor license, insurance certificate, project timeline — submitted to your HOA management company the same day we write the scope. Typical turnaround 7-14 days, running in parallel with adjuster coordination.

4

Insurance Claim Coordination

We file with your homeowners carrier, meet the adjuster on- site, advocate for full scope, and file supplements when tear-off uncovers hidden damage. Direct insurance billing is available for major SC carriers. For dual-cause losses (wind + pond backup), we separate the claims cleanly.

5

Permitted Install & Final ARC Closeout

GAF-certified materials installed to manufacturer spec, backed by a GAF Certified extended warranty on full replacements. Six-nail fastening per Horry County wind-zone code, enhanced starter course, sealed ridge vent. Tear-off, mid-install, and final Horry County inspections scheduled and attended. Final ARC completion photos submitted to your HOA to close the file. Most Carolina Forest storm repairs complete within 1-3 install days once HOA and insurance approvals are in hand.

Insurance: Homeowners vs Flood (the Carolina Forest Distinction)

The single most common mistake Carolina Forest homeowners make after a storm: assuming one insurance claim covers everything. It almost never does. You potentially have two policies in play, and knowing which damage goes where decides whether your roof repair is funded or denied.

Homeowners policy covers wind damage, hail damage, fallen-tree damage, and wind-driven rain intrusion from above. Almost every Carolina Forest roof claim falls here — trees snapping onto decking, shingles blowing off, wind-driven rain soaking ceilings from above. South Carolina hurricane claims may trigger a separate 2-5% named-storm deductible (higher than your standard deductible), but the claim itself is a homeowners claim.

National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) policy covers rising water damage from outside the structure. Most Carolina Forest homes are in FEMA Zone X (minimal flood risk) and do not carry flood insurance — but homes along ponds, Long Bay Creek, or low drainage easements may. If water rose up from outside during a multi-day rain event, that is a flood claim. You must have purchased a standalone NFIP policy before the event; homeowners alone does not cover it. FEMA NFIP is the primary provider.

Most Carolina Forest storm claims are purely homeowners. Tree-strike damage, wind-lifted shingles, broken seal strips, flashing failures, soffit blowouts — all wind-caused, all covered by homeowners. The flood overlap only matters for pondside homes that took groundwater or the rare address that sits in AE zone. Our inspection documents both where relevant, clearly separating wind-caused vs flood-caused damage, so your adjuster(s) see exactly what they need to pay.

If your carrier denies a roof claim as "flood damage excluded," don't accept the denial at face value. Many Carolina Forest roof failures after Florence were wind-driven rain intrusion with delayed manifestation — covered by homeowners, not flood. Supplementary claim approvals have reversed initial denials when proper documentation is filed. Our roof insurance claims guide walks through the playbook, and we've pushed successful supplements through major SC carriers for Carolina Forest clients.

Carolina Forest Subdivisions We Serve

We work across every major Carolina Forest subdivision, and we know each HOA's architectural review packet requirements before you call. Select your neighborhood for local roofing information.

Carolina Forest Storm Damage FAQs

The questions Carolina Forest homeowners actually ask us after a storm.

Do I need HOA approval to replace my Carolina Forest roof after storm damage?+

Almost always, yes. The vast majority of Carolina Forest subdivisions — The Farm, Waterbridge, Avalon, Plantation Lakes, Berkshire Forest, Brighton Lakes, Covington Lake, and most others — operate under HOA covenants that require architectural review committee (ARC) approval for any visible exterior change, including roof color and material. After a named storm you may qualify for an expedited same-color replacement approval, but skipping the ARC submittal can expose you to fines, forced removal, or a lien on your title. We file the ARC packet (product spec sheet, shingle color sample, contractor license, proof of insurance) at the start of every Carolina Forest job. Our average ARC turnaround across your HOAs is 7–14 days, and we time insurance approval to line up with it so the roof work is not delayed twice.

Was Carolina Forest affected by Hurricane Florence in 2018?+

Severely, but mostly by inland flooding, not wind. Florence made landfall as a Category 1 and the wind portion of the storm was moderate for Horry County. The crisis was rainfall — NWS Wilmington documented the Loris gauge (20 miles north of Carolina Forest) at 23.63 inches, a South Carolina tropical cyclone record. That water drained south through the Waccamaw basin and backed up into Carolina Forest's stormwater ponds, drainage swales, and low-lying lots. Several subdivisions including parts of Forestbrook, Plantation Lakes, and the older Carolina Forest core saw standing water for over a week. The roof impact was mostly delayed: wind-driven rain that penetrated during the storm caused rot that did not show up until late 2018 or 2019 when ceilings started staining.

My Carolina Forest home is in a flood zone. Does that change my roof repair?+

Possibly. Most Carolina Forest subdivisions sit in FEMA Zone X (minimal flood risk), but homes backed against Long Bay Creek, the Waccamaw tributaries, or stormwater retention ponds can be in Zone AE or Zone A. If your home is in an AE flood zone and the total scope of repair after a storm exceeds 50% of the structure's market value — a real scenario after a major event — Horry County floodplain rules can require elevating mechanical systems or meeting full floodplain compliance before the permit clears. Most standalone roof replacements are nowhere near that 50% threshold, but we check your FEMA zone at the start of every Carolina Forest project so there are no county surprises at inspection.

A live oak or loblolly limb fell on my Carolina Forest roof. What's the process?+

Leave the tree where it is. Do not pull it off the roof, even if neighbors offer to help — removing a limb the wrong way tears decking and rafters that were survivable. Call WeatherShield and call your homeowners carrier. We tarp the roof around the limb to stop active water intrusion, then coordinate a licensed arborist to section the tree with rigging rather than cutting it and letting it drop. After removal we can assess the actual structural damage — usually some combination of cracked decking, broken rafters, crushed gutters, and shingle damage within a 6-10 foot radius of the impact. Tree-fall damage is covered by your homeowners policy (not flood), and the initial emergency tarp plus arborist removal are usually reimbursable as part of the claim.

Why does my HOA require the same shingle color when I replace my roof?+

Master-planned communities like The Farm, Waterbridge, and Plantation Lakes were built with a defined architectural palette — shingle colors, siding tones, brick selections, trim colors — specified in the original CC&Rs to protect property values across the subdivision. The architectural review committee enforces that palette on every exterior change. When shingles discontinue (the biggest source of conflict in Carolina Forest ARC approvals), we submit the closest current equivalent with a side-by-side color sample. HOAs will usually approve a near-match if we document that the original SKU is discontinued. We keep a reference library of the approved shingle colors for every major Carolina Forest HOA, which shortens your ARC review time considerably.

My Carolina Forest neighborhood had hurricane damage but my roof looks fine. Do I need an inspection?+

Yes — especially if you were exposed to Florence, Matthew, Dorian, Ian, or Debby. The most common Carolina Forest pattern is sustained wind-driven rain that pushes water sideways under shingle tabs and past flashing without causing any visible exterior damage. The attic decking gets saturated and rots over 60 to 180 days. By the time the ceiling stain appears, you are looking at an insurance claim that is two years old with a carrier that now calls it wear-and-tear. We use a pinless moisture meter on every Carolina Forest post-storm inspection to catch saturated decking before it fails. The inspection is free and takes about 45 minutes.

How fast can you get to my Carolina Forest home after a storm?+

Our crews are based at 215 Ronnie Ct. Unit F in Myrtle Beach, about 10-15 minutes from most Carolina Forest subdivisions via Carolina Forest Boulevard or International Drive. For active water intrusion, tree strikes, and structural emergencies we prioritize same-day tarping when conditions are safe. During major named-storm events, call volumes across the Grand Strand spike and we triage by severity — active leaks and tree strikes first, routine damage assessments within 24-72 hours. Emergency calls come intoCall WeatherShield and are answered 24/7. The further we are into the season, the faster you should call — carriers and contractors alike get backed up after a big event.

Do you work on homes in Waterbridge, Avalon, The Farm, and Plantation Lakes?+

Yes, along with every other Carolina Forest subdivision: Berkshire Forest, Brighton Lakes, Blackmoor, Burning Ridge, Carolina Bays, Carriage Hills, Covington Lake, Cypress Keyes, Forestbrook, Fox Run, Hunters Ridge, Live Oaks, Mallard Landing, River Oaks, Southgate, Spring Lake, St. James Park, Teal Lake, Tuscany, Waterway Palms, Windsor Green, and the original Carolina Forest core. We've worked through most of the major HOAs' architectural review committees and can predict which packet requirements will slow your approval. If your subdivision has a specific shingle spec we can match it; if you're in a newer phase with open color options, we bring samples for your final selection.

What does hurricane wind damage actually look like on a Carolina Forest roof?+

Four patterns repeat across the subdivisions. First: broken seal strips — 45+ mph sustained wind events break the thermal bond between shingle courses, so shingles look fine but aren't sealed anymore and leak in the next rain. Second: lifted ridge cap and hip shingles, where the highest-exposure points of the roof separate at the nails. Third: bent or dislodged metal flashing at roof-wall junctions, chimneys, and pipe boots — where leaks actually start. Fourth: detached soffit panels and vented fascia at the eaves, which let wind-driven rain into the attic without ever touching the shingles. All four are invisible from the street, which is why post-storm inspections matter. Insurance pays for all of these as wind-caused damage when documented properly.

Should I file an insurance claim first or call a roofer first?+

Call the roofer first. A contractor inspection before the adjuster arrives gives you documentation the adjuster does not have — dated photos, moisture readings, GPS-tagged damage, and a written scope aligned with Xactimate format. When the adjuster shows up, your contractor should be on the roof too, pointing out hidden damage and advocating for full-scope coverage. Adjusters run dozens of claims during a major storm event and they miss things; a contractor who catches saturated decking, lifted underlayment, or soft spots in the sheathing often adds thousands to the payout. After the adjuster leaves, if any damage was missed we file a supplemental claim with full documentation. Our free 21-point inspection is designed specifically to be adjuster-ready on day one.

Are you storm chasers following the weather, or are you actually local?+

Local, permanent, and named. We are Weather Shield Roofing — Owner David Karimi, based at 215 Ronnie Ct. Unit F in Myrtle Beach, about 10 minutes from every Carolina Forest subdivision. We've been here since 2022 as a permanent part of the Grand Strand, not a post-storm pop-up. We hold a South Carolina Residential Builders license, are GAF Certified, carry BBB A-rated status, and hold 5.0 stars on 80+ public Google reviews. If a roofer in an unmarked truck knocks on your Carolina Forest door offering a free inspection and can't produce a local address or SC contractor license, close the door. HOAs are required to confirm contractor credentials as part of ARC approval — ours are already on file with most of them.

Carolina Forest Storm Damage? We Handle the HOA Packet Too.

Free 21-point inspection, HOA architectural review packet filed same-day as insurance scope, Xactimate-format adjuster documentation, and a crew that has worked through every major Carolina Forest ARC since 2022. No storm chasers, no out-of-state trucks, no surprise discontinued-shingle delays.

215 Ronnie Ct. Unit F, Myrtle Beach, SC 29579 · Serving Carolina Forest, The Farm, Waterbridge, Plantation Lakes, Avalon & 20+ subdivisions