Imperial Valley Press

Hurricane Lorena nears Mexico’s resort-studded Los Cabos

- BY IGNACIO MARTÍNEZ DE JESÚS

CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico — Hurricane Lorena neared Mexico’s resort-studded Los Cabos area Friday as owners pulled their boats from the water, tourists hunkered down in hotels, and police and soldiers went through low-lying, low-income neighborho­ods urging people to evacuate.

Lorena was forecast to pass over or near the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula Friday afternoon with heavy winds and soaking rains, and locals who have been through past hurricanes were taking no chances.

“If we don’t get the yacht out, the waves can damage it,” said Juan Hernández, who rents his craft to foreign visitors. It’s “a preventati­ve measure for when a cyclone threatens.”

Authoritie­s in Los Cabos said 787 people have taken refuge at 18 storm shelters. Local security forces urged local residents in low-lying areas to evacuate even as some tourists continued to stroll along the streets under cloudy skies. Others returned to their hotels.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami upgraded Lorena to a Category 1 hurricane early Friday. By the afternoon it had maximum sustained winds of 75 mph and was about 35 miles away, moving toward Cabo San Lucas at 6 mph. Forecaster­s predicted damaging winds, flash flooding and life threatenin­g surf along the peninsula.

“We arrived on Monday and we hope to leave Sunday . ... We hope there aren’t big problems,” said Minerva Smith, a traveler from California.

Lorena was kicking up heavy waves at the twin resorts of San Jose del Cabo and Cabo San Lucas.

Civil defense official Carlos Godínez said Friday an American tourist who went to the beach in Los Cabos with his son died after being swept out to sea. The son survived. But Godínez said the death occurred early Thursday, before beach access was restricted, and that it was “not necessaril­y attributab­le” to Lorena.

A second tropical storm, Mario, was about 345 miles south of the southern tip of the Baja peninsula Friday afternoon and had sustained winds of 65 mph.

But it wasn’t expected to hit land.

The port of Cabo San Lucas was closed to navigation. Authoritie­s suspended classes for Friday and prepared to use schools as shelters if necessary.

“We are taking preventive measures,” said Baja California Sur state government secretary-general Álvaro de la Peña. “Rations, gasoline, all supplies are guaranteed. There is no need for panic buying.”

The region was in a state of yellow alert and anticipati­ng heavy rains.

“Lorena is going to dump a lot of water,” said Carlos Alfredo Godínez, deputy secretary for civil defense in the state.

Lorena came onshore a day earlier as a hurricane in the western Mexican state of Colima, whipping palm trees about with its strong winds and lashing the area with sheets of rain. It flooded streets, washed out roads and touched off minor slides in 10 municipali­ties.

Dozens of trees were downed, and power was knocked out in some areas.

Colima state Gov. José Ignacio Peralta said nearly 8 inches of rain had fallen in a little under 24 hours, and more than 7,400 acres of crops such as bananas and papayas were damaged statewide.

But there were no deaths or significan­t damage to infrastruc­ture, he said.

“There are no losses of human lives to lament,” Peralta said.

Lorena’s brush with land caused it to lose strength and become a tropical storm, but it regained its punch as it headed toward Los Cabos.

In the Atlantic, Hurricane Jerry weakened but was forecast to dump heavy rains on the northern Leeward Islands. It was on a track that was predicted to carry it near the northern Leeward Islands on Friday and well north of Puerto Rico on Saturday before veering well east-northeast of the Bahamas, away from any land.

 ?? BRETT COOMER/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Splendora Police officer Mike Jones carries Ramiro Lopez Jr.’s dog, Panthea, from a boat after the officers rescued the family from their flooded neighborho­od as rains from Tropical Depression Imelda inundated the area, on Thursday, in Splendora, Texas.
BRETT COOMER/HOUSTON CHRONICLE VIA AP Splendora Police officer Mike Jones carries Ramiro Lopez Jr.’s dog, Panthea, from a boat after the officers rescued the family from their flooded neighborho­od as rains from Tropical Depression Imelda inundated the area, on Thursday, in Splendora, Texas.

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