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US Says Goodbye as Earl Heads to Canada09/04 09:52

   In the end, Hurricane Earl wasn't even as bad as some of the no-name 
nor'easters that pound New England from time to time.

   YARMOUTH, Mass. (AP) -- In the end, Hurricane Earl wasn't even as bad as 
some of the no-name nor'easters that pound New England from time to time.

   The storm, far less intense than feared, brushed past the Northeast and 
dumped heavy, wind-driven rain on Cape Cod cottages and fishing villages, but 
caused little damage. It left clear, blue skies in its wake, the perfect start 
to the Labor Day weekend.

   The worst of the damage in Massachusetts amounted to a few hundred power 
outages, a handful of downed power lines and isolated flooding. The storm 
didn't make much of an impression on the dozen people who stayed overnight at a 
Red Cross shelter at the Dennis-Yarmouth Regional High School in Yarmouth on 
the Cape.

   "Everybody was ready for something big to happen," said Red Cross worker 
Harry Watling. "But when it came, most of us hardly even noticed."

   After skimming past both North Carolina and Massachusetts, Earl was expected 
to finally make landfall Saturday morning in Nova Scotia.

   Power outages were spreading across the southern part of the province and 
there were numerous flight cancellations. Police said the road to the popular 
Peggy's Cove tourist site near Halifax was closed to keep curious 
storm-watchers away from the dangerous, pounding surf.

   Earl swooped into New England waters Friday night as a tropical storm with 
winds of 70 mph after sideswiping North Carolina's Outer Banks, where it caused 
flooding but no injuries and little damage. The rain it brought to Cape Cod, 
Nantucket Island and Martha's Vineyard was more typical of the nor'easters that 
residents have been dealing with for generations --- except this one disrupted 
the unofficial last weekend of summer.

   Winds on Nantucket blew at around 30 mph, with gusts above 40 mph. The 
island got more than 2 inches of rain, while adjacent Martha's Vineyard got 
more than 4 inches. Hyannis, home to Kennedy compound, got about 4.5 inches.

   Nantucket, the well-to-do resort island and old-time whaling port, briefly 
saw some localized flooding, but it cleared within hours, Nantucket Assistant 
Town Manager Gregg Tivnan said.

   Peter Judge, spokesman for the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency, 
said the damage was so minimal on Cape Cod and the islands that the agency 
didn't send out assessment teams as planned Saturday morning.

   "There's nothing to assess at this point," he said. "It wasn't even a really 
bad rainstorm."

   Judge said power outages peaked at about 1,800 but were down to a few 
hundred early Saturday and were being quickly restored. He said the state shut 
down its emergency management center as of 7 a.m. Saturday.

   In the hours and days before the storm, vacationers had pulled their boats 
from the water and canceled Labor Day weekend reservations on Nantucket. 
Shopkeepers boarded up their windows. Beachgoers were warned to stay out of the 
New England waters --- or off the beach altogether --- because of the danger of 
getting swept away by high waves.

   Airlines canceled dozens of flights into New England, and Amtrak suspended 
train service between New York and Boston.

   Massachusetts officials estimated that Cape Cod lost about 10 percent of its 
expected Labor Day weekend business, but were hopeful that last-minute 
vacationers would make up for it. Gov. Deval Patrick walked around Chatham on 
Saturday morning, proclaiming, "The sun is out and the Cape is open for 
business."

   As of 8 a.m. EDT, Earl's center was located about 40 miles south of Cape 
Sable, Nova Scotia, and was moving northeast at 30 mph. The Canadian Hurricane 
Center issued a hurricane watch in Nova Scotia from Ecum Secum to Point Tupper.

   Though the National Hurricane Center in Miami downgraded Earl to a tropical 
storm, Canadian officials were still calling it a marginal category 1 hurricane.

   John Parker of the Canadian Hurricane Centre said there's little difference.

   "Our concern here is that we're still seeing a fairly good eye," Parker 
said. He said tree branches and utility lines could be knocked down.

   Tropical storms typically weaken when they enter the colder waters between 
Maine and Canada, but many Nova Scotia residents stocked up on bottled water 
and canned goods, fearing a repeat of 2003, when Hurricane Juan killed eight 
and caused millions of dollars in damage.

   The storm weakened faster than predicted and would continue to diminish, 
National Weather Service meteorologist Rebecca Gould said.

   Earl dulled quickly over the course of 36 hours. By midday Friday, it had 
dropped to a Category 1 storm --- down from a fearsome Category 4 with 145 mph 
winds a day earlier. At 11 p.m., it was downgraded to a tropical storm.

   The storm did kick up dangerous riptides up and down the coast. In New 
Jersey, two young men apparently died earlier this week in the rough surf 
caused by Earl and the hurricane before it, Danielle. Fog, wind and roiling 
seas also hindered the search for a boater who went missing before Earl's 
arrival early Friday afternoon off Portsmouth, N.H.

   Officials warned that rip currents would continue to be a concern Saturday 
and Sunday. With offshore seas up to 20 feet, beaches would continue to see big 
waves that could knock people off jetties or piers.

   At Maine's Acadia National Park, officials closed most of a road where a 
7-year-old girl was swept to her death by a 20-foot wave last year while 
watching the swells from Bill.

   As of early Saturday, there were no reports of storm damage in Maine and 
very little for storm watchers to see.

   Bruce and Amy Hodgdon drove to the nation's eastern tip in Lubec, Maine, 
hoping to see dramatic surf pounding the rocks near the candy-striped West 
Quoddy Head lighthouse. Once there, they didn't bother to get out of their van.

   "Pretty mild," Bruce Hodgdon said.

   "Business as usual," Amy Hodgdon added.


(KA)


 
 
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