Sentinel & Enterprise

Hurricane roars at Mexico’s Yucatan

Storm expected to approach US Gulf Coast

- By Luis Andrés Henao and Gabriel Alcocer

CANCUN, MEXICO » Delta rapidly intensifie­d into a Category 4 hurricane with 140 mph winds Tuesday on a course to hammer southeaste­rn Mexico and then continue on to the U.S. Gulf coast this week.

The worst of the immediate impact was expected along the resort-studded northeaste­rn tip of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, where hurricane conditions were expected Tuesday night and landfall early Wednesday.

From Tulum to Cancun, tourism-dependent communitie­s still soaked by the remnants of Tropical Storm Gamma could bear the brunt of the storm.

In Cancun Tuesday, long lines stretched at supermarke­ts, lumber yards and gas stations as residents scrambled for provisions under mostly sunny skies.

Officials warned that residents should have several days of water and food on hand. Boat owners lined up at public ramps to pull their boats out of the water.

Mexico began evacuating tourists and residents from coastal areas along its Riviera Maya Tuesday. Quintana Roo Gov. Carlos Joaquin said that buses were carrying people off Holbox Island and hotels in Cancun and Puerto Morelos were busing their guests inland to government shelters.

Some hotels that had exemptions because their structures were rated for major hurricanes were preparing to shelter their guests in place and testing their emergency systems.

When the alarm blared at the Fiesta Americana Condesa hotel, Lizeth Elena Garza Hernandez, 35, rushed out of her room carrying in her arms her 10-monthold daughter, Hannah Cienfuegos. She had arrived Sunday from Reynosa, Tamaulipas with her husband, 4-year-old daughter and her parents-in-law.

“I’m scared because we don’t know how it could impact here, because we’ve never been in a situation like it,” she said.

Joseph Potts, a deputy sheriff from Denver, Colorado, took care of his 3-year-old son near a kiddie pool while his wife attended an emergency informatio­n session about the hurricane.

The hotel offered to shelter guests at a ballroom inside the hotel, but a short time later after the storm intensifie­d the hotel told them they would all be moved to a university in Cancun.

“The hurricane kind of popped up overnight and we just want to get it over with and go back to the beach,” Potts said.

The official definition of rapid intensific­ation of a hurricane is 35 mph in 24 hours. Delta has increased in strength 80 mph, more than doubling from a 60 mph storm at 2 pm EDT Monday to 140 mph at 2 pm EDT Tuesday.

Cancun Mayor Mara Lezama Espinosa said that the city had opened more shelters than usual to give people more space in recognitio­n of the COVID-19 pandemic.

State Tourism Minister Marisol Vanegas said there were currently 40,900 tourists in all of Quintana Roo. That number is a fraction of what it would normally be due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The area’s economy was devastated by months of pandemic-caused lockdown.

At the Moon Palace resort just south of Cancun, hundreds of guests from Moon Palace hotels on Cozumel, Isla Mujeres and beachfront rooms were being moved into a hurricane shelter at the resort’s large exposition center.

Bedding, food and entertainm­ent were being provided at the expo center for guests until the hurricane passes, said Cessie Cerrato, the vice-president of public relations for Palace Resorts.

“It’s massive,” Cerrato said of the convention hall. “It’s super safe and further away from the water.” Given the coronaviru­s pandemic, the hall will allow safe distancing, and face masks will be required for guests.

The state ordered all non-essential businesses to close by 1 p.m. and banned the sale of alcohol. Hurricane-strength winds were expected by Tuesday evening and landfall to occur near Puerto Morelos just south of Cancun between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. Wednesday.

Just south of Puerto Morelos in Playa del Carmen, tourist Zena Koudsi of Charlotte, North Carolina was taking a final walk along the beach before Delta hit.

“Never been to a hurricane area,” Koudsi said. “Never been to Mexico. I was expecting maybe more sun, less waves, but, you know, we’re trying to make the best of it.”

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Tuesday that 5,000 federal troops and emergency personnel were being made available in Quintana Roo to aid in storm efforts.

The state’s airports remained open Tuesday morning, but beaches were closed. American Airlines said Tuesday it added two flights for people to leave Cancun and waived ticketchan­ge fees for customers who alter travel plans that include Cancun or Cozumel through Thursday.

“I honestly don’t see much that will stop it until it reaches Yucatan, due to low vertical wind shear, high deep-layer moisture, and the very warm and deep waters of the northweste­rn Caribbean,” National Hurricane Center forecaster Eric Blake said.

It’s expected to arrive with an extremely dangerous storm surge raising water levels by as much as 7 to 11 feet in the Yucatan, accompanie­d by large and dangerous waves, and flash flooding inland.

 ?? VICTOR RUIZ GARCIA / AP ?? Fishermen pull in a boat before the arrival of Hurricane Delta in Puerto Juarez, Cancun, Mexico, Tuesday. Hurricane Delta rapidly intensifie­d into a potentiall­y catastroph­ic Category 4 hurricane Tuesday on a course to hammer southeaste­rn Mexico and then continue on to the U.S. Gulf coast this week
VICTOR RUIZ GARCIA / AP Fishermen pull in a boat before the arrival of Hurricane Delta in Puerto Juarez, Cancun, Mexico, Tuesday. Hurricane Delta rapidly intensifie­d into a potentiall­y catastroph­ic Category 4 hurricane Tuesday on a course to hammer southeaste­rn Mexico and then continue on to the U.S. Gulf coast this week

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