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Fay Picks Up, Then Slams Kite Boarder

Kite Boarder In Critical Condition

Tuesday, August 19, 2008 – updated: 5:44 pm EDT August 19, 2008

Rather than seek shelter, a kite boarder in Fort Lauderdale, Florida thought he'd have a little fun with Tropical Storm Fay.

But he turned out to get a ride that left him in the hospital.

He was harnessed into his sail when the wind picked him up and slammed him onto the beach. Then, he was dragged across the sand before being lifted up into the air again and blown across the street where the wind slammed him into a building.

Witnesses ran to help the man who lay crumpled on the ground in pain.

He was taken to the hospital where he is in critical condition.

Fay Hits Florida; Still No Rain For Metro Atlanta

Tropical Storm Fay made landfall on Florida's southwest coast early Tuesday after residents with memories of a killer hurricane in 2004 took the precaution of shutting schools, government offices and many businesses.

With no major Florida hurricanes in the past two years, officials were worried that complacency could cost lives as they repeatedly urged people across the state to take Fay seriously.

After crossing the Florida Keys without causing major damage Monday, Fay lumbered ashore about 5 a.m. Tuesday at Cape Romano, just south of Naples, with sustained winds of about 60 mph. That's well below hurricane threshold of 74 mph. Cape Romano is the same spot where Hurricane Wilma, a Category 3 storm, made landfall in October 2005.

Before landfall, Fay stirred unpleasant memories for many in and around Punta Gorda who rode out deadly Hurricane Charley in 2004.

"I am scared," said Monica Palanza, a Punta Gorda real estate agent who watched trees topple on her neighbors' homes when Charley reached Category 4 strength -- the second-strongest level -- just north of Punta Gorda. "You can never be prepared enough."

But others said they were relieved Fay was no Charley and took a wait-and-see attitude.

"After going through Charley, this doesn't seem nothing more than a gust of wind," said Jesse Gilmore, 34, who put up storm shutters Monday at a local business as a precaution.

New forecasts call for the storm to move across Florida, head back out into the Atlantic, come back ashore near Jacksonville and then slide across south Georgia into Alabama.

The sixth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season would become a hurricane if it reaches sustained winds of at least 74 mph.

At 5 a.m. EDT Tuesday, Fay was moving north-northeast near 9 mph. All hurricane warnings had been discontinued. A tropical storm warning, however, was in effect for everything south of Longboat Key on Florida's west coast and everything south of Flagler Beach on the east coast.

On Monday, as Fay headed toward the peninsula, schools and many businesses closed, even miles to the east in the Miami and Fort Lauderdale areas.

Southwest Florida International Airport near Fort Myers operated normally Monday, but airlines postponed about 140 flights Tuesday until evening hours, spokeswoman Victoria Moreland said.

Flooding is a major concern as Fay heads up the peninsula, with rainfall amounts forecast between 4 and 10 inches. Storm surge of 3 to 5 feet above normal was also possible. The storm also could spawn dangerous tornadoes.

Warnings to people to take precautions were issued as Fay spread rain and sent wind gusts of up to 51 mph over the Keys on Monday.

Monroe County Mayor Mario Di Gennaro estimated 25,000 fled the Keys before Fay hit there Monday afternoon.

"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 were available for distribution.

As it moved though the Caribbean, Fay was blamed for at least 14 deaths in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, including two babies who were found in a river after a bus crash.

People as far north as the Tampa Bay region worried about a possible strike. In Ruskin, Paula Fuentes, 52, sat with her pregnant daughter and other neighborhood acquaintances, trying to decide whether to evacuate to a local shelter.

"I just don't know what to do," Fuentes said. "Stay here or go, when it gets bad."

But Al Goenner, 35, nailed plywood to the windows of a bicycle shop after Fay swept across the Florida Keys on Monday toward the mainland. He wasn't too worried.

"I don't think it's going to be a problem," Goenner said. "We just want to make sure it's not a problem."

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