Skip navigation

La., Miss. spared; system veers ashore in Fla.

Katrina survivors were warned earlier to flee potential rains, winds

NBC News video
Storm spares New Orleans, hits Florida
Sept. 22: Residents of New Orleans breathe easier, but Florida residents clean-up after a tropical depression comes ashore there. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

Today show

Interactive
Follow the progress of present and past hurricanes
  Summer Travel

Hot destinations, helpful hints
to help you enjoy the season

Slide show
Bangladeshi commuters wade through  the flooded streets of Dhaka
Extreme events
View images of severe weather around the world in the first half of 2007.
Updated: 12:03 p.m. ET Sept. 22, 2007

A tropical depression came ashore in the Florida Panhandle on Friday, sparing coastal Louisiana and Mississippi the first serious brush with tropical weather since two hurricanes laid waste to the area in 2005.

Forecasters downgraded the threat when the storm system moved ashore near Fort Walton Beach in the panhandle. They said the depression maintained the same intensity as it made landfall.

“We expect it to move over land and weaken,” said Eric Blake, a hurricane specialist for the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

The weather service discontinued tropical storm warnings that had stretched from Apalachicola, Fla., to the mouth of the Mississippi River, including metropolitan New Orleans.

“Everybody’s dodging (the proverbial bullet) right now,” said Bob Wagner, a weather service meteorologist in Slidell, La.

Still, officials remained wary of the dangers strong gusts of wind could pose in areas rebuilding since hurricanes Katrina and Rita killed more than 1,600 people more than two years ago.

The latest storm system had battered parts of peninsular Florida before moving into the Gulf of Mexico. No evacuations were ordered, but officials had taken precautions, opening shelters and issuing sandbags.

At 8 p.m. ET, the storm system was expected to move northwest near 9 mph with maximum sustained winds near 35 mph and gusts in some embedded squalls as high as 55 mph. Two to 4 inches of rain was expected, and as much as 6 inches in some areas.

Isolated tornadoes could be possible in southwestern Georgia, the Florida Panhandle and southeastern Alabama throughout the night, officials warned.

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Rate this story LowHigh
 • View Top Rated stories

  MORE FROM WEATHER  
  
Weather Section Front
 
Add Weather headlines to your news reader: