Tropical Storm Ida blew ashore with rain and gusty but weakening winds before dawn Tuesday as weather-hardened Gulf Coast residents rode out the rare late-season storm. The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Ida's center first touched land on Dauphin Island and was headed across Mobile Bay for the Alabama mainland, with top sustained winds slowing to about 45 mph (75 kph). Ida was moving northeast about 9 mph (15 kph) and expected to turn eastward to follow the Florida Panhandle. Forecasters said the storm had already spread most of its heavy rain onshore along the Gulf Coast ahead of Ida's center. Tropical storm warnings were in effect across Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, where governors declared states of emergency. In Orange Beach, east of Mobile Bay near the Florida state line, hotel desk clerk Frank Worley said Ida was more like a thunderstorm than a hurricane as it slopped ashore overnight. "It was a lot of waves and wind, but it wasn't very harsh," he said. "There's a few people driving up and down the roads, but no one on the beach." There were reports of scattered power outages, but water that filled parking lots and roadsides late Monday was gone by daybreak Tuesday. The rain had stopped, but the winds are still brisk, whipping palm fronds and whistling through doors. On the beach, dry sand blew like snow in the glow of lights. The storm surge wasn't enough to breach sand berms along the Alabama coast guarding beachfront hotels and condominium buildings. Paula Tillman, a spokeswoman for the emergency operations agency in Baldwin County on the east side of Mobile Bay, said there were no reports of damage on the Alabama coast. "So far, so good," she said. In Mississippi's easternmost coastal county, authorities said the storm was pretty much over and water was already receding from about two dozen local roads that had flooded. "We fared well," said Jackson County Emergency Operations Director Donald Langham, who added there were no reports of homes damaged. The wind howled all night in Pensacola Beach, Fla., but unlike in some past storms the main beachfront road was not flooded and power remained on. Few people had evacuated or sought refuge along Alabama's coast ahead of the former hurricane that once had potent winds over 100 mph. Officials said fewer than 70 people were in shelters that opened in Mobile and Baldwin counties, with a population of 565,000. Continued... |