KILL DEVIL HILLS, N.C. | Hurricane Isabel
plowed into North Carolina's Outer Banks with 100 mph winds and
pushed its way Thursday up the Eastern Seaboard, weakening to a
tropical storm by evening but not before swamping roads and knocking
out power to more than 2.5 million people.
Isabel was blamed for at least two traffic deaths and the
electrocution of a utility employee.
The storm that had once threatened 160 mph winds and a 12-foot
storm surge rolled in around midday just south of isolated Ocracoke
Island with a 5-foot surge and gusts that rattled plywood boards
spray-painted "Bring it on Izzy."
"A lot of trees are down - there's one down across the garage,"
Rudy Austin said as he looked out on his yard in Ocracoke surrounded
by a knee-deep soup of sea water and debris. "There's a lot of stuff
floating around: boards and buoys and boxes and young'uns' plastic
toys."
The storm downed trees, snarled air traffic and knocked out
electricity - more than 2 million customers were without power in
North Carolina and southeastern Virginia alone. More than 430,000
customers in Maryland, 78,000 in the District of Columbia and 10,000
in New Jersey also lost power.
In North Carolina, a utility employee was electrocuted while
restoring power, and the storm was blamed for the deaths of two
motorists in Virginia and Maryland.
Isabel's top sustained wind eased to around 70 mph by late
evening. It continued to weaken, though it was still expected to
produce hurricane-force gusts of at least 74 mph in parts of
northern Virginia and Maryland.
National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield said fast-moving
Isabel still posed a threat because of its dimensions - about the
size of Colorado - and its potential to bring 6 to 10 inches of rain
and flooding to an East Coast already sodden from one of the wettest
summers in years.
"This is certainly not over for people experiencing Hurricane
Isabel," he said. "This hurricane will not be remembered for how
strong it is. It will be remembered for how large it is."
The storm spread rain across North Carolina and Virginia and into
Maryland, Delaware and parts of West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
In Harlowe, a small community about 25 miles inland from the
Outer Banks, about 30 to 40 homes were destroyed, either by winds,
falling trees or flooding, said Jeremy Brown, chief of Harlowe's
volunteer fire department. He estimated about 200 homes were
flooded.
Firefighters rescued a mother and her two children who were
stranded by the flood waters, Brown said. But the flooding receded
quickly, said resident Joe Fernandez, who watched the water rise
over his street and yard.
"It was like a toilet flushing. It just came up and went down,"
Fernandez said.
On the Outer Banks, the storm destroyed the 540-foot Jennette's
Pier in Nags Head and at least two beach houses, where storm surge
picked up a washer, dryer and refrigerator and carried them about
500 feet down the street.
In York County, Va., sheriff's deputies rescued a family of seven
trapped on a street when trees fell and blocked the path to their
car, county spokesman Greg Davy said. The family had driven to the
York River and gotten out of their car to "experience the
excitement," Davy said.
At 9 p.m., Isabel was about 30 miles northwest of Emporia, Va.,
moving northwest at around 20 mph, up from 14 mph Wednesday evening
when it approached the coast.
The increase in speed is not unusual, and could mean lighter rain
and less flooding, said Chris Sisko, a meteorologist at the
hurricane center.
"They'll still have flooding issues over the next day or two, but
the faster motion is at least a more positive impact," Sisko said.
The hurricane couldn't keep football fans away from Virginia
Tech's Lane Stadium, where the Hokies were playing Texas A&M.
The 65,115-seat stadium was sold out, even with rain that soaked
through parkas and wind that bent back umbrellas. Gusts of up to 50
mph were expected for the game in Blacksburg.
"My wife's been calling me on the cell phone all day. ... The
power's been off," said Hokies fan Lee Wagstaff, whose wife and
dairy farm were deep in Isabel's path in Clarksville, about 100
miles away on the North Carolina border.
Why wasn't Wagstaff at home? "Hey, it's a Tech ball game, man!"
Isabel was expected to move north across Virginia and cut through
western Pennsylvania and western New York state before dissipating
in Canada by Saturday.
Up to a foot of rain was possible in West Virginia's hilly
Eastern Panhandle and 6 to 9 inches was forecast for parts of
Pennsylvania.
President Bush declared major disasters in North Carolina and
Virginia, ordering federal aid to both states. The governors of
Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey and Delaware
declared state emergencies.
Well over 1,500 flights were canceled at airports in the major
Eastern cities, said David Stempler, president of the Air Travelers
Association. As the storm moved north, all flights to and from the
Washington metropolitan area's airports were likely to be canceled,
he said.
The federal government shut down in Washington. Amtrak halted
service south of Washington, and the Washington-area Metro system
shut down all subway and bus service.
Miss America pageant organizers went ahead with plans for their
annual parade Friday night in Atlantic City, N.J., hoping the
boardwalk would escape damage.
For many, the hurricane's passing was merely a sightseeing event.
"For me, this is just like another little rainstorm, but you take
what you can get," storm chaser Warren Faidley said as he videotaped
the frothy, 15-foot swells on Atlantic Beach, N.C.
He was impressed that in the middle of the hurricane, he was able
to get a hot sausage biscuit at a pier right on the beach.
"Hot food during the hurricane," he said, chewing away. "This is
the most gentlemanly chase of all times."