Erick upgraded to an extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane, forecasters say

Southern Mexico’s Pacific coast was braced for a Thursday morning impact with the approach of Hurricane Erick, which was upgraded to an “extremely dangerous” Category 4 early Thursday, the US National Hurricane Center said.The major storm threatens to unleash destructive winds near where the eye crashes ashore, flash floods and a dangerous storm surge, forecasters said.The Miami-based center reported Erick was about 70 miles west-southwest of Puerto Angel, Mexico, and about 90 miles southeast of Punta Maldonado, Mexico.The storm had maximum sustained winds of 145 mph and was moving northwest at 9 mph.A hurricane is defined as Category 4 when wind speeds reach 130-156 mph.Late Wednesday, Erick’s projected path crept south, closer to the resort city of Puerto Escondido in Oaxaca state, and centered on a sparsely populated stretch of coastline between the Oaxacan resort and Acapulco to the northwest.President Claudia Sheinbaum said in a video message Wednesday night that all activities in the region were suspended and she urged people to stay in their homes or to move to shelters if they lived in low-lying areas.Waves were crashing onto the esplanade in Puerto Escondido by nightfall, swamping wooden fishing boats that had been pulled up there for safety.

The beach disappeared under pounding waves and the rising tide had already reached the interiors of some waterfront restaurants.Last-minute purchases ended at nightfall as stores closed and the streets emptied.Earlier in the day, fishermen in Puerto Escondido pulled their boats out of the water ahead of the storm’s arrival.Some surfers continued to ride waves at the Zicatela beach, even with red flags up to warn people to stay out of the water.The storm’s course shift could be welcome relief for residents of storm-battered Acapulco.The city of nearly 1 million was devastated in October 2023 by Hurricane Otis, a Category 5 hurricane that rapidly intensified and caught many unprepared.

At least 52 people d...

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Publisher: New York Post

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