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Judy Packer was walking her black Labrador retriever near the beach in Nags Head, N.C., part of a vacation she had planned for months. The beach house she was renting came through the storm with barely a scratch. "If there had been substantial damage, we would have canceled the family vacation," said Packer, a 44-year-old accountant and mother of three from New York City. Now she plans to do the usual: spend most of her days at the beach and going to her favorite restaurants at night. "I just want to spend the next week unwinding," she said. "I'm just glad there wasn't much storm damage. It's good to be here." At the Comfort Inn on the beach at Nags Head, the hotel's 105 rooms were booked solid for the week before the storm, said manager Kelly Smith. But over the last 24 hours they received 150 cancellations for the coming week. She estimated that the hotel will only be about two-thirds full over the traditionally busy Labor Day weekend, when rooms go for $160 a night. Many of the cancellations are coming from northern states affected by Irene. "They're saying they're canceling because their power is off and don't know when it's coming on," Smith said. "Or they're saying their power is off, they had some damage and they don't know if they can afford the vacation anymore." Some resorts away from the ocean actually benefited from Irene. The Smoky Mountain resort city of Gatlinburg, Tenn., reported an influx of tourists last weekend as the hurricane forecasts were issued. Some of them were coastal residents trying to escape the weather, said city spokesman Jim Davis.
Hotels on Block Island, R.I. are slashing prices and trying as hard as they can to get the word out that their area was not affected by the storm. "Today is absolutely gorgeous," said Kathy Szabo, executive director of the Block Island Chamber of Commerce. "The ferries are running, and I sure hope that people come out. You wouldn't even know that a storm went by."
[Associated
Press;
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