Post-Beryl call floods across FM 1960 corridor
After Hurricane Beryl tore through Atascocita in July 2024, shops fielding calls from Walden on Lake Houston to Eagle Springs saw 4x normal volume for three weeks straight. You're doing a tarp job in Humble when a Pinehurst homeowner calls at 7pm about a soffit ripped loose along FM 1960. You miss it because you're on the ladder securing plywood over a shingle section damaged near Beltway 8. They call the next shop while you're loading the truck in Kingwood. By the time you check voicemail near Lake Houston the next morning, six more Atascocita Forest homeowners have moved on to shops that answered. Narlo replies within 10 seconds, asks for photos of the soffit damage near FM 2100, confirms the address in Lakewood Cove, and books the inspection into your CRM. You wake up to a full schedule across Crosby and Atascocita Trails instead of a list of callbacks that already booked elsewhere.