Ending ??? Nvm ending get the bloody flash lights in there already !!!
Top story on WMBF news at 6:00. Summary:
Search off for the night. Too dangerous with the rushing water. Reporter live on scene. Baby has not been found, several agencies have been searching the waterways.
Local mother being interviewed. Shocked, how can anybody do this? Like to know more of what is going on. Man interviewed, hopes this is just a hoax.
The mother has another child that looks to be about 6 years old, she plays with the neighbor's child. (I have seen comments that the baby's older sister is actually 9 years old.)
Police are working to verify the story. Baby's mother is in custody. She was at the house on Sims drive when police arrived.
Search will resume in the morning.
So, no real new info...
Are these creeks fast moving or pretty stagnant?
So she was at Sims Drive rather than Shem Creek Circle? Both are near the Negro Field Swamp (for real? This is its name?). The story says she came out of the creek and told somebody on Shem Creek Circle that she put the baby into the water and then she returned home on Sims Drive?! Who let this woman just walk back home?
At about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, a woman claiming to be the infant's mother came out of the water, knocked on the door of a home on Shem Creek Circle in Socastee, and told the person living there that she had thrown the infant girl into the creek behind a house on Simms Drive, said Lt. Raul Denis with Horry County Police. When police arrived at Sims Drive to investigate, the mother was home and was taken into custody.
One neighbor watched the whole scene unfold from her porch. She says she has never had a conversation with the woman, but she has seen her with the baby.
"We see her maybe once and a while, walking up and down the street with her," said a neighbor. "Not really sure what's going on, but I am a little shocked."
http://www.wmbfnews.com/story/30421...ew-infant-in-creek-rescue-efforts-in-progress
I think the mother did exactly what she claimed she did. This is postpartum psychosis, or equal.
I hope there's some way they can string a net or possibly damn up that creek a little bit on the downward end, otherwise that baby may get washed out to sea forever. I know it's a longshot to even suggest it, but if she gets caught up in a current, and with the searchers at home sleeping, well..........you understand.
http://www.wmbfnews.com/story/30421...ew-infant-in-creek-rescue-efforts-in-progress
I think the mother did exactly what she claimed she did. This is postpartum psychosis, or equal.
I hope there's some way they can string a net or possibly damn up that creek a little bit on the downward end, otherwise that baby may get washed out to sea forever. I know it's a longshot to even suggest it, but if she gets caught up in a current, and with the searchers at home sleeping, well..........you understand.
It was also high tide at approx. 340 this afternoon. The tide is now going out. With the rain this afternoon the banks would have been flooded above normal and I guess that might also help to have a body get caught up...I don't know. This is just so awful. A tiny child's body and the wildlife in the intercoastal scares me.
It appears bleak.
JMO
I know nothing about tides, etc. I mean I have seen the ocean in day vs night but I guess it hadn't dawned on me that canals and streams were heavily affected by tides. What sort of wildlife? Alligators, etc? I see it says swamp and that's all I think of when I see that word
When the tide comes in it does saturate the marshy swamp areas. When it rains those areas and higher ground become flooded. During a full moon it goes even higher. I'm in Charleston, SC and we recently had historic flooding, it was crazy.I know nothing about tides, etc. I mean I have seen the ocean in day vs night but I guess it hadn't dawned on me that canals and streams were heavily affected by tides. What sort of wildlife? Alligators, etc? I see it says swamp and that's all I think of when I see that word
There are sometimes alligators in the waterways around there, but it has been too cold for them for the past few weeks. They have moved further south.
I am in southeast NC, and we only get alligators in the summer when the rivers are very high . The local park ranger told me that they do move further south when the water gets cold. I'm not sure if Myrtle Beach has year round alligators or if only during the summer.Do they move south? We have alligators in our neighborhood ponds and it is not unusual to see them occasionally. They do become inactive in the winter months but I do not know if they actually go south...lol
It has actually been mid to upper 70s and 80s locally in the last two weeks.
JMO