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Craig Castrinos, left, and Kevin Vega, both of New Orleans, sit in a child's pool as they watch the traffic flow on state Highway 1 in Grand Isle, La.
Craig Castrinos, left, and Kevin Vega, both of New Orleans, sit in a child’s pool as they watch the traffic flow on state Highway 1 in Grand Isle, La.
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NEW ORLEANS — Crews hurried to get back to work on plugging BP’s leaky oil well Saturday after Tropical Storm Bonnie fizzled, and engineers hoped for a window of clear weather long enough to stop the gusher for good.

But with peak hurricane season starting in early August, chances are the next big storm is right on Bonnie’s heels.

“We’re going to be playing a cat-and-mouse game for the remainder of the hurricane season,” said retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen.

Sure enough, another disturbance was brewing in the Caribbean, although forecasters said it wasn’t likely to strengthen into a tropical storm.

In the past 10 years, an average of five named storms have hit the gulf each hurricane season. This year, two have struck already — Bonnie and Hurricane Alex at the end of June, which delayed cleanup of BP’s massive oil spill for a week.

“Usually you don’t see the first hurricane statistically until Aug. 10,” said Dennis Feltgen, a spokesman for the National Hurricane Center in Miami. “The 2010 hurricane season is running just ahead of a typical pace.”

Bonnie fell apart Saturday before it reached the Louisiana coast. By then, worries about the storm had pushed back efforts to solidly seal the well by at least a week, said Allen, the government’s point man on the spill.

Completion now looks possible by mid-August, but Allen said he wouldn’t hesitate to order another evacuation based on forecasts similar to the ones for Bonnie, which halted work Wednesday.

“We have no choice but to start well ahead of time if we think the storm track is going to bring gale-force winds, which are 39 miles per hour or above, anywhere close to well site,” Allen said.

Even though the evacuation turned out to be short-lived, it revealed one important fact: BP and the federal government are increasingly sure that the temporary plug will hold.

The storm might have a positive effect. Churning waters could help dissipate oil in the water, spreading out the surface slick and breaking up tar balls, said Jane Lubchenco of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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