Hurricane Erick in Mexico damages businesses and boats
Hurricane Erick in Mexico has decimated businesses and stranded dozens of boats.
This is the first major hurricane of the season, with another eight to 11 windstorms expected to hit the country.
It is expected to move inland over Southern Mexico, with winds reaching 250km per hour, damaging around 30 boats.

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USA Today
33 minutes ago
- USA Today
The 2025 hurricane season is off to a perplexing start
The eastern Pacific Ocean has seen a historic run of activity as the Atlantic remains dormant. Forecasters point to perplexing planetary phenomenon. Hurricane Erick formed June 18 in the eastern Pacific Ocean, becoming the fifth named storm of the eastern Pacific season to date – a flurry of activity in sharp contrast with the tepid start to hurricane season in the Atlantic. By some counts, the Eastern Pacific has been on a historic run, recording five named storms before the third week of June for the first time on record, said WPLG-TV 10 meteorologist Michael Lowry via his email newsletter June 17. See photo gallery: Photos show impact of Hurricane Erick after landfall along Mexico Pacific coast The activity was due in part to a large-scale climate pattern known as the Madden-Julian Oscillation, which is an eastward-moving disturbance of clouds, rainfall, winds, and pressure. It traverses the planet in the tropics and returns to its initial starting point in 30 to 60 days, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It, along with other obscure patterns such as Rossby and Kelvin waves, influence weather, including hurricane formation, around the globe. What does the fast start in the Pacific mean for the Atlantic hurricane season? Although some storms can cross over Central America from one ocean to the other, there isn't really an overall connection in activity, AccuWeather hurricane expert Alex Da Silva told USA TODAY. Colorado State University meteorologist Phil Klotzbach agreed, noting in an email to USA TODAY that "there's not a lot that we can say tying in the fast start to the eastern North Pacific to what the season may portend for the Atlantic. "The relationship between Atlantic hurricane activity and eastern North Pacific hurricane activity just off of the west coast of Mexico (as we've seen this year), is fairly weak," he said. Thus, the early activity in the Pacific isn't likely a harbinger of storms to come in the Atlantic. DaSilva said the Madden-Julian Oscillation pulse made it to the eastern Pacific but fell apart before reaching the Atlantic. What led to all the storms in the eastern Pacific so far this season? The pulse of storminess that moves eastward around the globe's tropical regions – the Madden-Julian Oscillation – "helped to kick off a flurry of storm activity in the eastern Pacific," Lowry said. Specifically, the MJO's enhanced phase, which is characterized by increased rainfall and rising air, creates an environment more conducive for hurricane development, while the suppressed phase has the opposite effect. Atlantic remains quiet ‒ for now While the eastern Pacific is running about a month ahead of schedule with all of its activity, the Atlantic is on track for a typical to even slow start, Lowry said. "Models are muted on any development chances for the basin into at least the middle part of next week." The next chance of widespread storminess returning to the tropical Atlantic won't be until around the first week of July. Other planetary phenomena at play A Kelvin wave, formally known as a convectively coupled Kelvin wave, is thought to have interacted with a Rossby wave over the Americas, contributing to limited tropical development in the Atlantic basin, but creating a favorable pattern that helped spawn the formation of both Dalila and Erick to the south of Mexico, according to the Climate Prediction Center. Kelvin waves, which can extend up to 4,000 miles in length and be thousands of miles wide, move along the equator in the same direction as the Madden-Julian, only faster, said Quinton Lawton, a post-doctoral fellow at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado. Perturbations inside the waves can encourage thunderstorms and rainfall. Scientists have only recently begun to understand more about how planetary phenomena work together to spawn or suppress tropical storms and hurricanes. 'It turns out that these waves actually end up being really important for tropical cyclones,' Lawton said. Kelvin waves and Rossby waves originate from energy in the atmosphere and then move along the equator. As the Madden-Julian circumnavigates the globe, its interaction with these atmospheric waves can encourage storm formation.

an hour ago
50% chance of a tropical depression forming off the coast of Central America within 7 days
An area of low pressure may develop off the coast of Central America and southern Mexico early next week. The Miami-based U.S. National Hurricane Center said Saturday environmental conditions might lead to 'some gradual development,' with a 50% chance of a tropical depression forming within seven days as the system moves west-northwestward. The chance of formation through 48 hours is near 0%, the center said. A category 3 major hurricane came ashore down southern Mexico's Pacific coast on Thursday. Hurricane Erick left a 1-year-old boy dead before dissipating.


Gulf Today
4 hours ago
- Gulf Today
Mexico assesses damage from hurricane
Authorities in southern Mexico were still assessing damage and watching rising rivers on Friday as rain from the remnants of Hurricane Erick doused the region. Torrential rains over steep coastal mountains and the landslides and flooding they could generate became the ongoing concern for officials after Erick dissipated following a landfall early Thursday on a sparsely populated stretch of coast. The storm's death toll remained at one Friday, a 1-year-old boy who drowned in a swollen river, President Claudia Sheinbaum said. She also said she planned to visit the affected region Friday. Power had been restored to about half the 277,000 customers who lost it and soldiers, marines and National Guard were helping to remove debris and reopen roads in Guerrero and Oaxaca state where Erick passed. Erick came ashore down southern Mexico's Pacific coast in the morning as a Category 3 major hurricane, but it landed between the resort cities of Acapulco and Puerto Escondido. It dissipated on Thursday night over the mountains in Michoacan state. Authorities reported landslides, blocked highways, downed power lines and some flooding as coastal residents, above all in Acapulco, took the storm seriously with memories of the devastating Hurricane Otis in 2023 still fresh in their minds. Erick had strengthened to a Category 4 storm as it approached the coast but weakened before making landfall to a Category 3. Having doubled in strength in less than a day, Erick churned through an ideal environment for quick intensification. Last year, there were 34 incidents of rapid intensification - when a storm gains at least 55 kph in 24 hours - which is about twice the average and causes problems with forecasting, according to the hurricane centre. Authorities had warned the heavy rain would become the problem. On Friday, National Civil Defense Coordinator Laura Velázquez said a river in Juchitan, Oaxaca had spilled over its banks and some families had moved to shelter. Forecasters had expected up to 40 centimetres of rain could fall across Oaxaca and Guerrero, with lesser totals in Chiapas, Michoacan, Colima and Jalisco states. The rainfall threatened flooding and mudslides, especially in areas with steep terrain. Late Thursday, Guerrero state Civil Defense Director Roberto Arroyo said that a 1-year-old boy had died in San Marcos, an inland community southeast of Acapulco in the path of Erick. Associated Press