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Isaac largely spares South Florida, but is expected to gain strength in Gulf

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Chicago resident Carla Rone-Davis, right, buys hurricane supplies while on her way to Panama City, Florida on Sunday, August 26, 2012, at The Home Depot in Biloxi. Rone-Davis and her daughters, Simone Davis, 9, left, and Sydney Davis, 12, were on vacation, visiting New Orleans and Florida, and decided to prepare for any possible emergencies. (Photo by Amanda McCoy/Biloxi Sun Herald/MCT)

KEY WEST, Fla. (MCT) — Big but not bad.

Tropical Storm Isaac huffed and puffed but blew little down other than palm fronds, branches and random trees. It frustrated fliers with hundreds of cancelled flights, sunk a few boats in the Keys and sparked scattered power outages across South Florida, imperiling the chili-pepper-flavored ice cream at one Homestead shop. But there were no reports of serious damage or flooding.

Unfortunately, Isaac was not expected to remain meek. The National Hurricane Center expects the sprawling mess of squalls that swept South Florida to morph into a wicked 100-mph storm, possibly stronger, bearing down on the Gulf Coast by Tuesday. Its target remained uncertain but a swath of vulnerable low-lying coastline from the eastern Panhandle to Louisiana, including the city of New Orleans, was under a hurricane watch.

At 11 p.m., forecasters said Isaac continued to move west-southwest after slipping just under Key West into the warm Gulf of Mexico. Its sustained winds remained at 65 mph, but it was expected to strengthen.

For South Florida, under a flood watch through Monday evening, Isaac’s broad tail of rain could continue to remain a headache. But the storm largely amounted to what Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez called a practice run for a region that dodged its first hurricane strike since Wilma in 2005. Forecasters had predicted it might hit the Keys as a Category 1 hurricane.

“It’s a good thing. We prepared for the worst,” Gimenez said. “Obviously we’re not going to get the worst. It’s a relief.”

Though damage appeared to be minimal, school and other closures in Miami-Dade, Broward and Monroe counties remained in place. Emergency managers urged residents to head out cautiously, if at all, so workers could clean up debris and check equipment.

“We always have people get injured or killed post-storm,” Broward Emergency Operations Director Chuck Lanza said.

Outside Key West’s ramshackle Schooner Wharf Bar, a bearded bicyclist pedaled by, wearing a rain poncho and hooting a sentiment about Isaac widely expressed across the Keys, where locals shrugged off the threat.

“It’s not a hurricane,” the cyclist called out. “It’s a windy day in paradise.”

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