Baltimore Sun

Humberto winds kicking in as Bermuda hunkers down

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MIAMI — Powerful winds from Hurricane Humberto began hitting Bermuda on Wednesday as the government urged people to stay off the streets during the British territory’s close brush with the powerful Category 3 storm.

And another growing storm threatened tourist resorts along Mexico’s Pacific.

Bermuda Gov. John Rankin called up 120 members of the Royal Bermuda Regiment to prepare for possible storm recovery efforts and National Security Minister Wayne Caines urged everyone to be off the streets.

Authoritie­s ordered early closings of schools, clinics and government offices.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said tropical storm-force winds began to hit the islands of some 70,000 people and warned that hurricane-force gusts would probably last until early Thursday.

James Dodgson, director of the Bermuda Weather Service, said the storm was projected to pass about 80 miles to the north of Bermuda on Wednesday night and could produce tornadoes and dangerous storm surge.

“Humberto’s a big hurricane and we’re looking at the conditions already deteriorat­ing. There’s some very strong winds kicking in,,” he said.

Caines said nonemergen­cy medical services would be closed until Thursday. Flights from the U.S. and Great Britain were canceled.

“We’d like to ask all of Bermuda to prepare for the storm, to know that the government and everyone is rooting for us, and we can get through this,” Caines said. “We’ve been through this before.”

Humberto’s maximum sustained winds strengthen­ed to 120 mph and the storm was centered about 140 miles west of Bermuda. It was moving east-northeast at 16 mph Wednesday.

Hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 105 miles from the center, with tropical-storm-force winds reaching as far as 195 miles.

Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Lorena posed an increasing threat to tourist resorts on Mexico’s Pacific Coast and the Baja California Peninsula.

Forecaster­s said Lorena was expected to brush or hit land by early Thursday somewhere between the port of Manzanillo and Puerto Vallarta while growing toward hurricane force.

The still-uncertain long-term forecast track showed it moving on toward the Los Cabos resorts by Saturday.

Maximum sustained winds had increased to near 70 mph, with higher gusts. It was located about 100 miles southsouth­east of Manzanillo.

Mexican officials also said they were concerned that some parts of southern Mexico, which have seen a lack of rainfall, could now get torrential rains and floods from a combinatio­n of Lorena and two other weather systems in the area.

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 ?? AKIL J. SIMMONS/AP ?? People board up a store Wednesday in preparatio­n for Category 3 Hurricane Humberto in Hamilton, Bermuda.
AKIL J. SIMMONS/AP People board up a store Wednesday in preparatio­n for Category 3 Hurricane Humberto in Hamilton, Bermuda.

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