inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

The Real Florida Keys

Florida Keys Vacation - Where the locals go

Archive for Weather

What storm? Keys take Tropical Storm Fay in stride.

By BRIAN SKOLOFF – 18 hours agoKEY WEST, Fla. (AP) — Two years since a hurricane last lashed at Florida, many residents were taking a wait-and-see attitude Monday as a strengthening Tropical Storm Fay bore down on the Florida Keys and Gulf Coast.

While tourists caught the last flight out of town and headed out of the storm’s path, residents in the carefree Florida Keys were putting up hurricane shutters and checking their generators, but not doing much more.

“We’re not worried about it. We’ve seen this movie before,” said 58-year-old Willie Dykes, who lives on a sailboat in Key West and was buying food, water and whiskey.

By midafternoon, heavy rains moving ahead of Fay’s core were pelting the low-lying Keys island chain. Sustained winds of about 33 mph bent palm trees, and some gusts hit 51 mph.

The sixth named storm in the Atlantic hurricane season was expected to become a hurricane before curling up the state’s western coast and hitting Florida’s mainland sometime Tuesday.

“There are bad storms and there are nice ones, and this is a nice one,” said Becky Weldon, a 43-year-old guest house manager in Key West. “It cleans out all the trees, it gives people a little work to do and it gets the tourists out of here for a few days.”

Officials were worried that complacency could cost lives, repeatedly urging people across the state to take Fay seriously. The message got through to tourists — Monroe County Mayor Mario Di Gennaro estimated 25,000 fled the Keys. Some residents have taken steps since the busy 2004-05 storm years, when eight hurricanes hammered Florida, such as buying generators and strengthening homes, but not everyone is as prepared.

“This is not the type of storm that’s going to rip off a lot of roofs or cause the type of damage we normally see in a large hurricane,” said Craig Fugate, the state’s emergency management chief.

However, Fugate said: “I’ve seen as many people die when I have a blob-shaped asymmetrical storm that they dismiss as not being very dangerous.”

The state took every step to make sure it was ready. National Guard troops were at the ready and more were waiting in reserve, and 20 truckloads of tarps, 200 truckloads of water and 52 truckloads of food had arrived.

One who did heed the call to prepare was Chris Fleeman, a 35-year-old mechanic on Big Pine Key who was busy helping friends and family members seal up their homes.

“I’ve got a generator and I’ve got a concrete home that I built myself, so I know it can withstand this,” Fleeman said.

Since 2006, Florida has taken several steps to make sure its residents are prepared. More than 400,000 houses were inspected under a program that provides grants to people to strengthen their houses.

Florida law also now requires some 970 gas stations along hurricane evacuation routes statewide to have backup generators so they can keep pumping gas if the power goes out. Many utilities also have installed stronger power poles.

“Every hurricane that we have, we have additional lessons learned and experience,” said U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.

As it moved though the Carribean, Fay was blamed for at least eight deaths in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, including two babies who were found in a river after a bus crash.

It passed over the Keys around 3 p.m. on Monday, and a hurricane watch was in effect for most of the Keys and along the state’s west coast, with a tropical storm warning in effect in the east from Sebastian Inlet southward. Maximum sustained wind speeds were near 60 mph with higher gusts.

No damage or injuries were immediately reported in the Keys, where a few bars and restaurants stubbornly remained open. Authorities said a possible tornado knocked down a tree on Big Coppitt Key and there were scattered power outages as well as local street flooding.

Between 4 and 10 inches of rain is possible across mainland Florida, so flooding is a threat even far from where the center comes ashore, said Stacy Stewart, a senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center.

“This is a broad, really diffuse storm. All the Florida Keys and all the Florida peninsula are going to feel the effects of this storm, no matter where the center makes landfall,” he said. “We don’t want people to downplay this.”

Farther north, residents were not so sanguine. In Punta Gorda — a Gulf Coast community hit hard by Hurricane Charley in 2004 — the sounds of drills were in the air as business owners attached aluminum storm shutters to windows and doors Monday afternoon.

The very idea of an August storm frightens residents there, especially those who rode out the compact but powerful Category 4 hurricane four years ago.

“I am scared,” said Monica Palanza, a Punta Gorda real estate agent who remembers seeing trees topple on her neighbors’ homes in 2004. “You can never be prepared enough.”

Associated Press Writers Kelli Kennedy and Travis Reed in the Keys, Christine Armario in Tampa, Tamara Lush in Punta Gorda, Matt Sedensky in Fort Myers, Lisa Orkin Emmanuel in Miami, Bill Kaczor and Brendan Farrington in Tallahassee and Sarah Larimer in Orlando contributed to this story.

Tropical Storm Fay Makes Landfall Over Florida Keys

By Brian K. Sullivan and Jerry Hart

Aug. 18 (Bloomberg) — Tropical Storm Fay, which killed about a dozen people on its way through the Caribbean, is heading toward southwest Florida after making landfall over Key West earlier today.

The storm may hit the state’s southwest coast tomorrow, packing hurricane-force winds of at least 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said in an advisory on its Web site. Crude oil fell as the storm is expected to miss oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.

Fay made landfall over Key West at about 3 p.m. local time, according to the Hurricane Center. By 8 p.m. Miami time, the center of the storm was about 105 miles south of Naples, Florida, and heading north at 9 mph, the center said in an advisory.

“Late tonight or tomorrow we should see it strengthen to hurricane status,” said Jim Rouiller, a senior energy meteorologist with Planalytics Inc. in Wayne, Pennsylvania.

Fay’s maximum sustained winds were about 60 mph, with strengthening expected over the next day, the center said. A storm becomes a hurricane once sustained winds reach 74 mph.

Fay’s winds should reach at least that speed when it hits mainland Florida, making it a Category 1 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale, Rouiller said.

Rain Forecast

The storm is expected to dump as much as 10 inches (25.4 centimeters) of rain over the Florida Keys and the central and southern Florida peninsula, according to the hurricane center. The storm may produce tornadoes today and tomorrow in parts of Florida, the Center said in its 8 p.m. advisory.

Rouiller said the track will spare most of the oil and natural gas rigs in the Gulf of Mexico, which is home to about a fifth of U.S. oil production.

“It looks like minimal type of risk to the rigs,” Rouiller said by telephone. “They have dodged a bullet with this one.”

Crude oil for September delivery fell 0.6 percent to $113.06 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Orange juice rose to the highest price this month. Florida is the world’s second-largest orange grower.

Orange-juice futures for November delivery rose 2.3 percent to $1.0865 a pound on ICE Futures U.S., the former New York Board of Trade. Fay probably won’t threaten citrus crops because it will weaken once it gets over land, Rouiller said.

Feared Dead

Fay killed four people in the Dominican Republic, the country’s Emergency Operations center said on its Web site. At least seven people were killed by the storm in Haiti, Agence France-Presse said.

Two others may have died after a bus overturned while trying to cross a flooded river, the Associated Press reported, citing the United Nations. AP reported earlier that 30 people on the bus were feared dead.

Amtrak canceled services to and from Florida for tomorrow, according to a statement. The Auto Train from Lorton, Virginia, to Sanford, Florida, was canceled as well as the Silver Star and Silver Meteor trains between New York and Miami.

Students in Dade and Monroe counties got a few extra days of summer vacation, as the two school systems said in statements that they put off the start of their school year from today to Aug. 20.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian K. Sullivan in Boston at bsullivan10@bloomberg.net; Jerry Hart in Miami at jhart@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: August 18, 2008 21:04 EDT