By Bill Kaczor
The Associated Press
PENSACOLA, Fla. - Rather than roll the dice on where 160-mph Hurricane Ivan might strike, Gulf Coast residents from Florida's Panhandle all the way to the bayous of Louisiana spent Monday boarding up their houses, tying up their boats and making plans to evacuate.
"I'm getting the hell out of here. This thing's too big," charter boat captain Jerry Weber said as he steered his 41-foot vessel up the Apalachicola River out of harm's way. "It doesn't matter where it comes ashore, not at this size."
The hard-to-predict Category 5 storm, one of the most powerful hurricanes ever to hit the Caribbean, killed at least 68 people in a devastating run through Barbados, Grenada, Jamaica, and the Cayman Islands. The storm began hitting Cuba Monday.
Emergency officials in several Florida Panhandle counties began issuing evacuation orders Monday for all those living in mobile homes, barrier islands and storm surge areas. In Escambia County, which includes Pensacola, that order affects 130,000 homes. Earlier, military bases in the region flew out 275 aircraft, and oil and natural gas companies began evacuating hundreds of workers from offshore rigs in the eastern Gulf of Mexico.
Late Monday, Ivan was centered near the western tip of Cuba, and was headed toward the northwest at nearly 9 mph. It had also grown during the day, with hurricane-force winds extending 115 miles from the eye.
Although some forecasters predicted weakening over the cooler waters of the Gulf of Mexico, National Hurricane Center director Max Mayfield said Ivan would still be "very formidable."
"It's going to hit somebody," he warned. "This is a very, very dangerous hurricane."
On Pensacola Beach, Mark Sigler and his son stacked sandbags across the driveway of their steel-reinforced dome house that is supposedly designed to withstand hurricane-force winds. They were not sticking around to find out.
"It's stupid to stay unless you like camping in a disaster area," he said. "There's no reason to be out here."
Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama residents had thought they were in the clear, until Ivan shifted over the weekend and put them in the possible path.
"I'm not going to stay and wait and see if it's scary," Molly Dupont said in Orange Beach, Ala., as she got ready to head for a sister's home in Ohio.
Along Mississippi's 75-mile-long coastline, which has been remade in recent years by splashy gambling houses, some floating casinos allowed employees time off to get their houses secured. But the gambling never stopped.
In the New Orleans area, which is largely below sea level and extremely vulnerable to hurricanes, Lynn Harrington filled her grocery cart with water, bleach, duct tape and canned tuna and beans.
"My boyfriend says that if you have cigarettes, toilet paper and lots of booze, you can trade for everything you need," she said.
In Florida, Ivan's final run has only added to the anxiety in a state that has already endured Hurricanes Charley and Frances in the past month alone. The last time Florida was hit by three hurricanes in a single season was 1964.
Cedar Key, an island in an area where the Florida peninsula turns into the Panhandle, has been either in the path or in the evacuation zone for the two previous storms and has not been ruled out as a target for Ivan.
At Fishbonz Chowder House, one of only two restaurants open in Cedar Key, paramedic Michel DuMont said she would not take plywood down from her doors and windows until after Ivan ran its course.
"How can you overreact to a Category 5?" DuMont said. "Frances was ugly, but Ivan is mean."
At the state's southern end, people who had fled the Keys were told the 120-mile island chain had dodged the storm and the 79,000 residents could go back home. They began trickling back to shuttered homes and businesses.
"By the time this hurricane season is over, everyone is going to be a nervous wreck," said Rick Coble, a clerk at Bargain Books in Key West.
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On the Net:
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