PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) Tropical Storm Ida sloshed ashore with
rain and gusty winds Tuesday before weakening to a depression,
causing little damage along the Gulf Coast but bringing more rain
to the already-soaked Southeast.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Ida's center
first touched land on Dauphin Island, Ala., before heading across
Mobile Bay toward the Alabama mainland and on to Florida.
Top winds dropped to near 35 mph as Ida weakened. Forecasters
said it would likely be absorbed by a front Wednesday.
The scene it left behind delighted tourists and residents
strolling on Pensacola Beach in the Florida Panhandle on Tuesday
afternoon.
''It is beautiful, spectacular,'' said F.M. Hall of Tennessee as
he waded into the frothy water and watched the white-capped waves
rolling onto white sand.
Eric Rohde strolled along the beach with 9-year-old twin sons
Dylan and Zackery, who were collecting shells, driftwood and other
treasures washed up by the rough surf.
''I grew up in Ohio and this place is paradise,'' said Rohde,
who now lives in Pensacola. ''I'll take a storm every couple of
years for this.''
Tropical storm warnings were discontinued Tuesday morning across
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. Forecasters said the
storm had spread most of its heavy rain along the Gulf Coast ahead
of Ida's center. Rain continued Tuesday afternoon in Tennessee, the
Carolinas and Georgia, where flooding was a concern.
''The only thing it did to us is knock out the power,'' resident
Jimmy Wentworth said as he sipped coffee outside the Ship&Shore
convenience store on Dauphin Island. ''Our houses and people are
fine. I'm fine.''
In Louisiana, authorities continued their search for 70-year-old
fisherman Leo Ancalade, who was presumed dead after he was knocked
off his boat by a wave as Ida approached Monday. The Coast Guard
said he was towing friends whose small boat lost power in the
Mississippi River.
No other U.S. deaths were reported, but earlier in the week, a
low-pressure system that the hurricane may have helped attract
triggered flooding and landslides in El Salvador that killed at
least 130 people.
The storm did wash out a section of sea wall designed to protect
the Jetty East condominium complex in Destin, Fla., from storm
surge. Inspectors declared the building safe for residents, but
repairs will be needed on top of the $300,000 spent during
hurricane season last year.
''We are looking at another $60,000 now,'' said Jerry Stalnaker,
the general manager at the building. ''Our owners aren't too
happy.''
The storm shut down nearly a third of oil and natural gas
production in the Gulf as companies moved workers ahead of Ida, but
demand was so low due to the economic downturn that energy prices
barely budged. Oil companies said they would quickly fly workers
back out to platforms to restart operations.
Scattered power outages were reported, but water that filled
parking lots and roadsides in coastal Alabama late Monday was gone
by daybreak Tuesday.
Atlanta resident Mike White drove down Monday to see the storm
and was watching breakers crash at Gulf Shores, Ala., early
Tuesday. The sky was clear overhead but there were clouds all
around.
''This is spectacular,'' White said. ''It's almost like we are
in the eyewall.''
The sun was out in Mississippi's easternmost coastal county and
water was receding from about two dozen local roads that had
flooded.
Patrick Keene, 71, and his wife, Kathie, live in a doublewide
trailer in the shadow of the beach front home in Pascagoula, Miss.,
that they are rebuilding four years after Hurricane Katrina.
While his wife retreated to their son's home across the state
Monday night, Keene and his dog rode out the storm in the trailer.
''We get summer squalls frequently that are as bad as this
one,'' he said.
Ida started moving across the Gulf as the third hurricane of
this year's quiet Atlantic tropical season, which ends Dec. 1, but
weakened before it got to the U.S. Ronnie Powell, headed to his
construction job on Pensacola Beach, wasn't impressed.
''We've had thunderstorms worse than that,'' he said.
Associated Press Writers Bill Kaczor in Pensacola, Greg
Bluestein in Dauphin Island, Ala., Jay Reeves in Gulf Shores, Ala.,
and Mike Kunzelman in Pascagoula, Miss., contributed to this
report.
(Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)