PERRY, Fla. — Deborah Green wept when describing what Hurricane Idalia did to her town.

“I saw all the power lines down and the trees and buildings . . . I just didn’t know what we were coming back to,” she said. Green, her husband, and six children had fled as the ferocious storm approached Perry, a small mill town located just inland from the coast where Idalia made landfall.

Like many Florida residents whose homes and towns felt the brunt of Idalia’s winds and storm surge, the Greens saw tough evidence of the storm’s power. Idalia arrived as a high-end Category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds near 125, splitting trees in half, ripping roofs off hotels and turning small cars into boats before sweeping into Georgia and South Carolina.

When they came back to Perry on Wednesday afternoon, Green family members were happy that their home was still largely intact. But the sight of the destruction in many other parts of town was overwhelming.

Green’s decision to leave was fueled by her experience with Hurricane Hermine in 2016, which separated the roof of her bedroom from the walls and then blew the walls away. It took months to finish but her bedroom was completely rebuilt with the help of all her immediate family, who live only blocks away.

On Wednesday, the family cleared debris from their yard. Their back porch was smashed by a fallen tree, and there was light roof damage elsewhere.

“We were blessed that we had our home to come back to,” Green said as she smiled at her youngest daughter.

Vulnerable areas, such as low-lying and coastal parts of Florida, were the hardest-hit by the hurricane. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis reported that while properties had been severely damaged and areas were blanketed with debris, there were no immediate reports of fatalities.