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Weather Last Updated: Dec 15, 2007 - 2:55:41 AM


Ernesto hits Fla. lacking big punch
By Associated Press
Aug 30, 2006 - 7:12:00 AM

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KEY LARGO, Fla. - South Florida residents breathed a sigh of relief early Wednesday after Tropical Storm Ernesto confounded forecasters by lumbering ashore without the hurricane-strength winds that had once been feared.

People walk along South Pointe Park as heavy bands of rain and wind from Tropical Storm Ernesto hit Miami Beach, Fla., Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2006. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)


Ernesto lost much of its punch crossing mountainous eastern Cuba. It made landfall late Tuesday on Plantation Key with 45-mph winds, far from the 74-mph threshold for a hurricane that Ernesto briefly met Sunday.

"Fortunately it didn't get too big," said David Rudduck of the American Red Cross. "It was the little train that couldn't."

Forecasters said Ernesto could weaken to a tropical depression later Wednesday, but rainbands could dump as much as 10 inches of rain in some spots along Florida's east coast.

At a bar in Key Largo, transplanted New Yorker Brian Lima nursed a beer while he watched the rain fall. "I've seen much worse rainstorms in New York," Lima said.

Ernesto was forecast to move up the middle of Florida and exit on the northeast coast by early Thursday before hitting the mainland again in Georgia or the Carolinas.

"How much strengthening occurs after Ernesto emerges into the Atlantic depends on how much of a cyclone is left," said senior hurricane specialist James Franklin.

A tropical storm warning was in effect from Bonita Beach, on Florida's west coast, around the peninsula and Keys and up the entire eastern length of Florida to Altamaha Sound, Ga., about halfway up that state's coast. A hurricane watch was in effect from the Savannah River, Ga., northward to Cape Fear, N.C.

"The best-laid plans can be disrupted by Mother Nature, in the event this storm were to stall out over the warm waters of the Gulf Stream and intensify," South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford warned.

Some people, such as North Carolina forecaster Ryan Boyles, welcomed the possibility of a good soaking. "The ground is dry, the streams are low and the reservoirs are down," he said.

At 5 a.m. EDT, the center of the storm was about 45 miles west-southwest of Miami and moving north-northwest near 8 mph. Ernesto still had top sustained winds of 45 mph.

"This does not look like a catastrophic event, but we always want to be ready," Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said in Tallahassee. He attended Hurricane Katrina anniversary events earlier in the day in Louisiana and Mississippi.

The storm initially prompted NASA to start moving the space shuttle to an assembling building for protection, but NASA later reversed course and sent it back to the launch pad.

Florida's leaders, who declared a state of emergency for the entire state, were ready to respond with 500 National Guard members and another 500 state law enforcement officers.

Accidents on rain-slickened expressways killed at least two people in Florida Tuesday. A Miami woman died after the car in which she was riding hydroplaned and struck a palm tree, and a motorcyclist was killed near Boca Raton after losing control and being struck by two other vehicles. Ernesto also killed at least two people in Haiti.

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford announced nearly 250 National Guardsmen were being mobilized to help direct traffic if evacuations were ordered and said contractors working on highway projects along evacuation routes would temporarily shut down operations.

Some embraced the weather as an opportunity. A squall preceding the storm brought out kite-surfers on Miami Beach until the wind became too strong.

In the laid-back Florida Keys, many residents took the storm in stride. At the Hurricane Grille in Marathon, wall-mounted TVs showed Ernesto approaching the Keys as Dean Carrigan enjoyed beer and a game of darts.

"It's definitely the Keys lifestyle that we're out here drinking and having a good time," Carrigan said. "This doesn't seem like anything. It looks like more of a thunderstorm."

Even as heavy rain fell, Carol Allor ventured out to buy a roast to cook at home. "It's not even a hurricane," she said. "I'm sure there'll be a worse one later."

Off Mexico's west coast, meanwhile, Hurricane John was a powerful Category 3 storm, with maximum sustained winds of 115 mph. The storm threatened to cause flooding and ruin vacations in some Pacific resorts, but it was not expected to directly hit land.

___

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