The silence replaces the clucking of hundreds of thousands of chickens and turkeys who, just days before, occupied the barns that are now submerged under rust-brown, feces-strewn water in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence, which devastated the state of North Carolina.
The air burns the eyes of photojournalist Jo-Anne McArthur, who steers the boat.
“We’ve seen thousands of bodies floating in fields and caught in fences,” recalls McArthur, founder of We Animals, which chronicles the plight of animals on all seven continents. “I tried, but could not fathom, the terrifying deaths these individuals endured as the waters rose inside the sheds where they were trapped.”
Florence’s downfall came just a month after Farm Sanctuary’s Hoedown, where McArthur connected with North Carolina Waterkeeper Alliance Senior Advisor Rick Dove, who pioneered the use of aircraft to document sources of pollution.