Current:Home > ContactHurricane Beryl takes aim at the Mexican resort of Tulum as a Category 3 storm -MarketPoint
Hurricane Beryl takes aim at the Mexican resort of Tulum as a Category 3 storm
View
Date:2025-04-12 18:18:11
TULUM, Mexico (AP) — Hurricane Beryl strengthened back into a Category 3 storm and headed for what could be a direct hit on Mexico’s Caribbean coast resort of Tulum early Friday, where authorities urged tourists to leave white sand beaches.
Beryl was the earliest Category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic before weakening to a Category 2 storm. But it regained strength late Thursday with windspeeds of 115 mph (185 kph ) as it neared landfall on Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador issued a statement late Thursday saying Beryl may make a direct hit on Tulum, which, while smaller than Cancun, still holds thousands of tourists and residents.
“It is recommendable that people get to higher ground, shelters or the homes of friends or family elsewhere,” López Obrador wrote. “Don’t hesitate, material possessions can be replaced.”
Once a sleepy, laid-back village, in recent years Tulum has boomed with unrestrained development and now has about 50,000 permanent inhabitants and at least as many tourists on an average day. The resort now has its own international airport, but it is largely low-lying, just a few yards (meters) above sea level.
Late Thursday night, the storm’s center was about 135 miles (220 kilometers) east-southeast of Tulum and was moving west-northwest at 16 mph (about 26 kph), the hurricane center said.
On Friday, Beryl was expected to weaken as it crossed over the Yucatan peninsula and re-emerge in the Gulf of Mexico, where the surprisingly resilient storm could once again become a hurricane and make a second landfall around Mexico’s border with Texas next week.
As the wind began gusting over Tulum’s beaches, four-wheelers with megaphones rolled along the sand telling people to leave. Tourists snapped photos of the growing surf, but military personnel urged them to leave.
Authorities around the Yucatan peninsula have prepared shelters, evacuated some small outlying coastal communities and even moved sea turtle eggs off beaches threatened by storm surge. In Tulum, authorities shut things down and evacuated beachside hotels.
Francisco Bencomo, general manager of Hotel Umi in Tulum, said all of their guests had left.
“With these conditions, we’ll be completely locked down,” he said, adding there were no plans to have guests return before July 10th.
“We’ve cut the gas and electricity. We also have an emergency floor where two maintenance employees will be locking down,” he said from the hotel. “We have them staying in the room farthest from the beach and windows.”
“I hope we have the least impact possible on the hotel, that the hurricane moves quickly through Tulum, and that it’s nothing serious,” he said.
Tourists were also taking precautions. Lara Marsters, 54, a therapist visiting Tulum from Boise, Idaho, said “this morning we woke up and just filled all of our empty water bottles with water from the tap and put it in the freezer … so we will have water to flush the toilet.”
“We expect that the power will go out,” Marsters said. “We’re going to hunker down and stay safe.”
Myriam Setra, a 34-year-old tourist from Dallas, Texas, was having a sandwich on the beach earlier Thursday, saying “figured we’d get the last of the sun in today, too. And then it’s just going to be hunker down and just stay indoors until hopefully it passes.”
But once Beryl re-emerges into the Gulf of Mexico a day later, forecasters say it is again expected to build to hurricane strength and could hit right around the Mexico-U.S. border, at Matamoros. That area was already soaked in June by Tropical Storm Alberto.
Velázquez said temporary storm shelters were in place at schools and hotels but efforts to evacuate a few highly exposed villages — like Punta Allen, which sits on a narrow spit of land south of Tulum — and Mahahual, further south — had been only partially successful.
Earlier, Beryl wreaked havoc in the Caribbean. The hurricane damaged or destroyed 95% of homes on a pair of islands in St. Vincent and the Grenadines, jumbled fishing boats in Barbados and ripped off roofs and knocked out electricity in Jamaica.
Three people were reported killed in Grenada and Carriacou and another in St. Vincent and the Grenadines, officials said. Three other deaths were reported in northern Venezuela, where four people were missing, officials said.
In the Pacific, Tropical Storm Aletta was located about 245 miles (395 kilometers) west of Manzanillo and had maximum sustained winds of 40 mph (65 kph), and was forecast to head away from land and dissipate by the weekend.
___
Myers reported from Kingston, Jamaica. Associated Press writers Renloy Trail in Kingston, Jamaica; Mark Stevenson, María Verza and Mariana Martínez Barba in Mexico City; Coral Murphy Marcos in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Lucanus Ollivierre in Kingstown, St. Vincent and Grenadines, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- $1.05 billion Mega Million jackpot is among a surge in huge payouts due to more than just luck
- Pee-wee Herman creator Paul Reubens dies at 70
- Preppy Killer Robert Chambers released from prison after second lengthy prison term
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Judge blocks Arkansas law that would allow librarians to be charged for loaning obscene books to minors
- Announcing the 2023 Student Podcast Challenge Honorable Mentions
- Author Iyanla Vanzant Mourns Death of Youngest Daughter
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Brittney Griner will miss at least two WNBA games to focus on her mental health, Phoenix Mercury says
Ranking
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Mother who killed two children in sex-fueled plot sentenced to life in prison, no parole
- San Francisco investigates Twitter's 'X' sign. Musk responds with a laughing emoji
- Teresa Giudice Calls Sofia Vergara Rudest Woman She's Ever Met
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Niger general who helped stage coup declares himself country's new leader
- Horoscopes Today, July 30, 2023
- The stars of Broadway’s ‘Back to the Future’ musical happily speed into the past every night
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Crews battle ‘fire whirls’ in California blaze in Mojave Desert
Extreme Rain From Atmospheric Rivers and Ice-Heating Micro-Cracks Are Ominous New Threats to the Greenland Ice Sheet
Biden administration to give some migrants in Mexico refugee status in U.S.
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
'Like a broken record': Aaron Judge can't cure what ails Yankees as trade deadline looms
Georgia resident dies from rare brain-eating amoeba, likely infected while swimming in a lake or pond
Appellate court rules that Missouri man with schizophrenia can be executed after all