Hurricane Patricia lashes Mexico coast, weakens as it moves inland
Category 5 hurricane expected to diminish to tropical storm overnight
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- Hurricane Patricia makes landfall near Cuixmala
- Historically powerful storm has weakened slightly, but still a Category 5 hurricane
- Ottawa urges Canadian tourists to flee approaching storm if possible, avoid area.
- Prime minister-designate Justin Trudeau says Canada ready to help Mexico
- Some tourists allowed to return to hotel in Puerto Vallarta
Hurricane Patricia roared ashore in southwestern Mexico Friday evening, bringing lashing rains, surging seas and cyclonic winds hours after it peaked as one of the strongest storms ever recorded.
There were early reports of some flooding and landslides as the storm moved over inland mountains after nightfall. Television news reports from the coast showed some toppled trees and lampposts and inundated streets. Milenio TV carried footage of cars and buses being swept by floodwaters in the state of Jalisco.
But authorities said there were no immediate reports of fatalities or the kind of major, widespread damage feared earlier in the day when forecasters warned of a potentially "catastrophic" landfall.
"The first reports confirm that the damage has been less than those expected from a hurricane of this magnitude," President Enrique Pena Nieto said in a taped address late Friday. However, he added, "we cannot yet let our guard down."
Patricia's centre made landfall as a monstrous Category 5 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 270 km/h, but in a relatively low-populated stretch of the Jalisco state coast near Cuixmala. The nearest significant city, Manzanillo, was about 85 kilometres southeast and outside the zone of the storm's hurricane-force winds.
By late Friday, Patricia was rapidly losing steam but was still a major hurricane with winds at 215 km/h, the centre reported, just above the threshold for a Category 4.
Patricia's projected path headed over a mountainous region dotted with hamlets that are at risk for dangerous mudslides and flash floods, and where communications can be sketchy. The storm was expected to rapidly weaken over the mountains and dissipate Saturday, but it was still capable of soaking the region with heavy rain.
Visitors and residents weathered the hurricane in emergency shelters. State officials in Puerto Vallarta allowed about 200 tourists to return to two hotels after Patricia passed, though they recommended they stay at the shelter.
- Canada warns against travel to Mexico as Hurricane Patricia approaches
- Graphic: Hurricane Patricia's track as it approaches landfall
"The National Hurricane Centre in Miami has determined that this storm is the strongest storm ever seen on the American continent," said Roberto Ramirez, executive director of Mexico's National Water Commission, which includes the country's meteorological service.
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) tweeted as much Friday morning. A spokesperson for the UN's World Meteorological Organization said Patricia's wind speeds are equivalent to those needed for a jet airliner to take off and stay aloft. Category 5 is the highest on the Saffir-Simpson scale for hurricanes.
Patricia made landfall at 615 p.m. CDT (2315 UTC) along the coast of Mexico near Cuixmala. <a href="https://t.co/Oy8uof9ldM">https://t.co/Oy8uof9ldM</a> <a href="https://t.co/0nSnPZXFXz">pic.twitter.com/0nSnPZXFXz</a>
—@NHC_Pacific
Despite its ferocity, it's still not the strongest storm recorded on the globe. In an interview with CBC News, Halifax meteorologist Jean Marc Coutier said while Patricia is the strongest tropical cyclone in decades, a northwest Pacific cyclone in 1955 had a wind maximum of 333 km/h.
Hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons are all the same weather phenomenon, according to NOAA, but different names are used for these storms in different places. In the Atlantic and Northeast Pacific, the term "hurricane" is used. The same type of disturbance in the Northwest Pacific is called a "typhoon" and in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean is called a "cyclone."
Homes reinforced with sandbags
Earlier in Puerto Vallarta, locals reinforced homes with sandbags and shop windows with boards and tape, and hotels closed beachfront restaurants. The airport was closed and all but deserted, but lines formed at a bus station by people anxious to buy tickets to Guadalajara and other inland destinations.