Hurricane Andres forms off Mexico’s Pacific coast


PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (AP) — Andres strengthened into the Pacific season’s first hurricane Tuesday, flooding homes, toppling trees and killing at least one person as it swiped Mexico’s southwestern coast with wind and rain.

Andres packed maximum winds near 75 mph, just over the threshold of hurricane strength, but was expected to weaken over the next day or two, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

The center of the storm as of 8 p.m. was about 70 miles west of the port city of Manzanillo. Moving near 13 mph toward the northwest, it was forecast to pass very close to or over the southwestern coast later Tuesday.

Mexican authorities posted a hurricane warning for the coastal strip from just south of Manzanillo to near Puerto Vallarta, and heavy rain flooded homes and wind blew down trees in the states of Jalisco, Colima and Guerrero.

In Puerto Vallarta, port authorities said the arrival of the cruise ship Carnival Splendor was rescheduled from today to July 1.

Authorities opened 18 shelters and were visiting high-risk areas to advise residents to leave, said Alfredo Rivas, director of Puerto Vallarta’s Fire Department.

Rivas said people were staying put Tuesday because it was raining lightly and they didn’t feel they were in danger.

Rain poured down on Manzanillo, where authorities opened 14 shelters amid forecasts that the storm would likely graze the city.

Forecasters said Andres would then churn past tourist towns such as Barra de Navidad that are home to some American and Canadian expatriates.

It was raining lightly in Barra de Navidad on Tuesday afternoon, but hotels were already preparing.

To the south, rain caused flooding Monday in the resort of Acapulco that forced about 200 people to evacuate their homes.

A fisherman drowned when choppy currents overturned his boat in a lagoon in Tecpan de Galeana, between Acapulco and Zihuatanejo, a state police report said.

The sun peeked through cloudy skies in Acapulco on Tuesday, but the government closed all schools.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Andres could bring a storm surge of as much as 3 feet above normal while dumping as much as 8 inches of rain in a few spots.

The forecast track showed the storm then weakening as it continues northwest along the coast before veering into the open Pacific and just south of the Los Cabos resorts at the tip of the Baja California peninsula Thursday morning.

Late Sunday, Andres became the first named storm of the eastern Pacific hurricane season, which began May 15 and ends Nov. 30.