Las Vegas Review-Journal

Locals, tourists prepare for Tropical Storm Bud

Region hit severely by 2014’s Hurricane Odile

- By Juliet Williams The Associated Press

SAN JOSE DEL CABO, Mexico — Tropical Storm Bud lashed the southern end of Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula, home to the popular beach resorts of Los Cabos, with heavy winds Thursday as locals and tourists braced for an expected landfall later in the day.

The tops of palm trees whipped about in the gale and waves pounded the sand. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said tropical storm-force winds had reached the peninsula even as Bud’s center was still about 70 miles south-southeast of Cabo San Lucas.

Memories are still fresh of the extensive damage done in 2014 by a direct hit from Category 3 Hurricane Odile, and hotel operators were taking no chances.

Workers at the Marquis Los Cabos hotel in San Jose del Cabo spent the past three days battening down the hatches — anchoring palm trees and using tarps to cover large windows that had all shattered during Odile. On Wednesday evening they removed beach chairs and umbrellas, and workers said the hotel had a saferoom for guests if necessary.

Overall, however, there was a sense of relief that Bud had been sapped of most of its punch from when it was a Category 4 hurricane two days earlier with maximum sustained winds of 130 mph.

By Thursday wind speeds had dropped to 45 mph, strong enough to potentiall­y do some damage, but likely nothing resembling the devastatio­n wrought by Odile four years ago.

The internatio­nal airport appeared to be operating normally in the afternoon. Tarmac employees wore yellow ponchos amid moderate rainfall, and workers used brooms to sweep pools of water by the entrances to the terminals.

Bud was moving toward the north-northwest at 7 mph and further weakening was expected, but it was forecast to still be at tropical-storm strength when it reaches land later in the day.

After it crosses over the peninsula, the storm is then projected to move over the Gulf of California as a tropical depression and make a second landfall on the Mexican mainland by Friday night.

A tropical storm warning was in effect for the Baja coast from Santa Fe to the state capital, La Paz.

The Baja California Sur state government said the ports of Los Cabos were closed to all watercraft beginning midday Wednesday, and classes were canceled at schools in Los Cabos and La Paz for Thursday afternoon and Friday.

The hurricane center said the storm could cause dangerous surf and bring 2 to 4 inches of rain to southern Baja California Sur and Sonora states on the mainland, threatenin­g dangerous flash floods and landslides.

Cabo San Lucas and San Jose del Cabo receive millions of internatio­nal and domestic tourists each year.

 ?? Juliet Williams ?? The Associated Press Palm trees bend in heavy winds along the ocean coast Thursday near the Marquis Los Cabos Resort in San Jose del Cabo, Mexico.
Juliet Williams The Associated Press Palm trees bend in heavy winds along the ocean coast Thursday near the Marquis Los Cabos Resort in San Jose del Cabo, Mexico.

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